BLOG FloridaPolicyScience March 6, 2020

How Fertilizers are Impacting Miami’s Waterways

When people fly into Miami, they are taken aback by the city’s lush streetscape and seemingly continuous tree cover. Cities are usually sights of impermeable concrete—but Miami offers a refreshing marriage of metropolis...

BLOG ScienceWildlife Facts March 6, 2020

How Fertilizers are Impacting Miami’s Waterways

While freediving in the waters of the Great Barrier Reef off the coast of Australia’s Lady Elliot Island, photographer Kristian Laine spotted something that at first took him aback. Was his camera malfunctioning? Somehow...

BLOG FloridaScience February 19, 2020

Is This Manta Ray Really Pink?

No one can forget the impact that the red tide outbreak of 2017 and 2018 had on Florida’s coast. Covering close to 1,000 miles of the state’s shoreline at its peak, the bloom caused harm to wildlife, public health, the t...

BLOG Science December 18, 2019

Stemming the Impact of Red Tide Starts With Us Working Together

This blog was written by Dr. David Shiffman, a marine conservation biologist and public science educator based in Washington, D.C. Renowned for his witty social media presence, he has written for the widely-read ocean sc...

BLOG FloridaPolicyScience November 19, 2019

Busting Ocean Myths

Growing up in the Florida Keys, I’ve always loved marine wildlife. From sea turtles to dolphins to countless seabirds, there are so many incredible animals that call Florida home. While all of the Sunshine State’s marine...

BLOG ArcticScience November 18, 2019

Make a Difference for Manatees This Month

Few animals capture the imagination like the thirteen species of great whales, but only recently have we really considered how crucial their conservation is to our fight against climate change. As the International Marit...

BLOG Ghost GearPlasticsScience November 14, 2019

Take it Slow: Reducing Ship Speeds Helps Whales and Our Climate

Ingrid Giskes is the Director of the Global Ghost Gear Initiative (GGGI), where she works to tackle the most harmful form of marine debris in our ocean: lost and abandoned fishing gear. She has a background in internatio...

BLOG FloridaPolicyScience November 6, 2019

Dispatches on Ghost Gear from Our Ocean 2019

Over the past few years, Floridians have become unpleasantly familiar with repeated noxious harmful blue-green algal blooms that have plagued rivers and estuaries, killing fish and shellfish, fouling boats and underminin...

BLOG FloridaScience October 25, 2019

Hold the Guacamole: Florida Making Important Steps in Combating Harmful Algal Blooms

We are more likely to get sick when we are stressed. The same logic applies to other animals. Stress leads to weakened system defenses, and this is true for Florida’s coral reefs. Florida’s coral reefs are currentl...

BLOG FloridaScience September 9, 2019

A Disease is Ravaging Florida’s Coral Reefs

“If we can identify what we are doing wrong, then maybe we can identify what we can do right.” – Captain Casey Streeter, Matlacha, Lee County – Commercial Fisherman and Owner-Operator of Island Seafood Market In 2018, Fl...