Stanford Researchers Compute Grazing Rates on Coral and Temperate Rocky Reefs

By using the control volume approach and carefully integrating physical and biological sampling, a team of researchers including COS’ Brock Woodson, Stephen Monismith, Jeff Koseff, and Fiorenza Micheli are tackling the computation of grazing rates on coral and temperate rocky reefs.  Read more...

An Academic and Municipal Partnership Tackles Local Land-Sea Policy

Workshop participant Helen OBrien from UC Santa Cruz works between sessions (photo: A. Abeles).    by Julie Stewart, MARINE curriculum intern

It’s not every day that the mayor, city planners and press come to Hopkins Marine Station to hear students speak, particularly at 9 AM on a beautiful sunny Sunday morning. But on December 5, Mayor Carmelita Garcia and Councilman Bill Kampe of Pacific Grove, along with local and regional managers and a reporter from the Cedar Street Times, came to hear policy recommendations from local graduate students for a course sponsored by the Center for Ocean Solutions.

Graduate students from six local campuses (UCSC, Moss Landing Marine Labs, CSUMB, MIIS, Stanford and Hopkins Marine Station) were involved in this MARINE (Monterey Area Research Institutions’ Network for Education), course, which is part of COS’ education initiative. Stanford University Professor Nicole Ardoin was the faculty lead for the course and MARINE Program Manager Margaret Krebs was the course coordinator. I was also involved in this project, and although I was initially signed on to develop the course’s content, my role evolved and I also became a liaison, organizer, and facilitator.  Read more...

Stanford Researchers Dissect Squids with Kids in Washington, D.C.

A family in Washington, D.C. dissects a Humbolt Squid with Stanford's Squids-4-Kids program (photo: J. Stewart)

  by Julie Stewart, MARINE curriculum intern

I never thought that I could talk about Humboldt squid for seven and a half hours nearly non-stop. Or that I could do it for two days in a row. But it turns out that I can –­ this is how I spent October 23rd and 24th in Washington, DC at the first annual USA Science and Engineering Festival.

My Ph.D. advisor Dr. William Gilly and I went to the festival to represent Hopkins Marine Station and Stanford University through our outreach program called Squids-4-Kids. (Read more in the Stanford Daily) This is a program we formed along with our colleagues at NOAA Fisheries in Santa Cruz to send Humboldt squid to classrooms all over the nation. We also go to local classrooms and conduct dissections, which is a really fun way to interact with kids and get them interested in marine biology. We were joined in DC by Ken Baltz (one of our colleagues at NOAA) and Katharine Dickson (a undergraduate cephalopod enthusiast!). Throughout the course of the two-day festival we dissected seven Humboldt squid on the National Mall, about half way between the Capitol and the Washington Monument. (Read more....)

Gulf oil spill overlaps critical bluefin tuna habitat during spawning season.

This map shows the track (yellow line) and daily positions (dots) of an electronically tagged giant bluefin tuna, which spent March 23-May 24, 2009, in the Gulf of Mexico. The track is overlaid on the area of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill as of May 24, 2010 (black). (Credit: Tag-A-Giant Foundation and Stanford University)

Erin Louryby Erin Loury

Science Communication Intern/M.S. Candidate at Moss Landing Marine Labs

The Gulf of Mexico oil spill may spell big trouble for the Atlantic bluefin tuna, one of the most commercially valuable species that is already beleaguered by overfishing.   The area of the Deepwater Horizon spill coincides with critical bluefin spawning grounds, which the fish return to with amazing fidelity, a new study finds.

Dr. Steven Teo of the University of California at Davis and Dr. Barbara Block of Stanford University recently published a paper in the journal PLoS ONE, which reveals pronounced differences in habitat use between bluefin and yellowfin tuna in the Gulf of Mexico.  Using electronic tagging and fisheries catch data, Teo and Block discovered that bluefin are highly specific in their habitat use.  These giant fish select cool, productive water masses in the slope waters of the northern Gulf of Mexico, with a site fidelity reminiscent of salmon returning to their natal streams.  In contrast to yellowfin tuna, which are more widely distributed throughout the warm Gulf waters, "The bluefins' habitat requirements are relatively exact, so we can predict with reasonable accuracy where bluefin tuna are likely to be spawning at any given time based on oceanographic data,” Dr. Teo said. 

Unfortunately, this predictive power leads to a troubling prognosis in the wake of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. Read more...

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