Skip to main content
Smithsonian Institution
Language Search Smithsonian Ocean
Follow us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter Follow us on Flickr Follow us on Tumbr
Donate

Smithsonian Ocean

Main Menu

  • Ocean Life
    • Marine Mammals
    • Sharks & Rays
    • Reptiles
    • Seabirds
    • Fish
    • Invertebrates
    • Plankton
    • Plants & Algae
    • Microbes
  • Ecosystems
    • Coral Reefs
    • Deep Sea
    • Coasts & Shallow Water
    • Poles
    • Census of Marine Life
  • Planet Ocean
    • Tides & Currents
    • Waves, Storms & Tsunamis
    • The Seafloor
    • Temperature & Chemistry
  • Through Time
    • Ancient Seas
    • Extinctions
    • Evolution
    • The Anthropocene
  • Conservation
    • Fishing
    • Pollution
    • Habitat Destruction
    • Invasive Species
    • Acidification
    • Climate Change
    • Gulf Oil Spill
    • Solutions & Success Stories
    • Get Involved
  • Human Connections
    • Books, Film & The Arts
    • Recreation
    • Seafood
    • Exploration
    • History & Cultures
    • Careers
  • At The Museum
  • Educators
Menu

Search

Showing results for "All"
Filter

Content type

  • (-) Article (7)

Article Type

  • (-) Article (7)
  • Personal Perspectives (6)

Topics

  • Ancient Seas (3)
  • Animal Behavior (5)
  • At The Museum (9)
  • Beaches (4)
  • Careers (4)
  • Climate Change (2)
  • Coasts & Shallow Water (13)
  • Coral Reefs (3)
  • Deep Sea (2)
  • Evolution (1)
  • Exploration (8)
  • Extinctions (2)
  • Fishing (4)
  • Genetics (3)
  • Get Involved (3)
  • Gulf Oil Spill (2)
  • Habitat Destruction (1)
  • History & Cultures (3)
  • Invasive Species (1)
  • Invertebrates (5)
  • Marine Mammals (6)
  • Microbes (5)
  • Ocean Life (6)
  • Planet Ocean (1)
  • Plankton (2)
  • Plants & Algae (10)
  • Poles (1)
  • Reptiles (4)
  • Seafood (2)
  • Sharks & Rays (3)
  • Technology (5)
  • Temperature & Chemistry (1)
  • The Seafloor (1)
  • Tides & Currents (2)
  • (-) Books, Film & The Arts (1)
  • (-) Food Web (3)
  • (-) Mangroves (3)

Tags

  • (-) Mangroves (3)
  • (-) Scientists at work (2)
  • (-) Under the microscope (2)
  • Art (4)
  • Biodiversity (2)
  • Corals (6)
  • Deepwater Horizon (2)
  • Feeding (2)
  • Fisheries (2)
  • Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative (2)
  • Ocean Optimism (2)
  • Oil spills (2)
  • Photography (3)
  • Predation (3)
  • Smithsonian Environmental Research Center (2)
  • Smithsonian exhibits (2)
  • Smithsonian scientists (4)
Grey reef sharks are among the most versatile and tough predators on a Pacific coral reef, but they are also among the most vulnerable species, as they are threatened by wasteful fishing practices like shark finning.
Article

Where the Shark and the Snapper Roam

The pre-industrial American landscape was once rightly described as a place where...
March 2014
A newly established black mangrove sits in a field of salt marsh near the northern limit of mangroves in Florida. Mangroves have been expanding near their northern limit in Florida and the expansion is linked to a reduction in the frequency of ex
Article

Finding Mangroves In Unexpected Places

Over the past several decades, Florida’s coastal wetlands have been changing....
February 2014
Corals, sponges, and algae are the major components of most coral reef communities as shown in this picture.
Article

Making Science Sing: The Longest Time (Coral Triangle Edition)

How do you make science sing? Just ask a couple of female scientists to sing about...
July 2012
Mark Dodd, a wildlife biologist from Georgia's Department of Natural Resources, surveying oiled sargassum seaweed in the Gulf of Mexico after the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in 2010.
Article

The Oil Spill, Two Years Later

Two years ago last week, on April 20, 2010, an explosion on the oil-drilling rig...
April 2012
Mangroves on the edge of the water.
Article

Mangrove Restoration: Letting Mother Nature Do The Work

The ecological importance of coastal mangrove forests is common knowledge today....
December 2016
A view out of the tiny window of the Johnson-Sea-Link submersible.
Article

How Methane Fueled a Food Web after the Gulf Oil Spill

In August 1994, Mandy Joye dove to the deep sea in a submersible for the first...
January 2015
These Smithsonian field stations enable scientists worldwide to conduct long-term studies on mangrove ecosystems.
Article

Smithsonian Research Stations

Smithsonian scientists and their colleagues are investigating important questions...
November 2009
  • Sort By Relevance
  • A-Z
  • Z-A
  • Newest
  • Oldest

Smithsonian Institution

Smithsonian Ocean
Follow us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter Follow us on Flickr Follow us on Tumbr
Contact Us

Explore

  • Ocean Life
  • Ecosystems
  • Planet Ocean
  • Through Time
  • Conservation
  • Human Connections
  • At The Museum
  • About
  • Media Archive
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy

Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History

Donate
  • Ocean Life
    • Marine Mammals
    • Sharks & Rays
    • Reptiles
    • Seabirds
    • Fish
    • Invertebrates
    • Plankton
    • Plants & Algae
    • Microbes
  • Ecosystems
    • Coral Reefs
    • Deep Sea
    • Coasts & Shallow Water
    • Poles
    • Census of Marine Life
  • Planet Ocean
    • Tides & Currents
    • Waves, Storms & Tsunamis
    • The Seafloor
    • Temperature & Chemistry
  • Through Time
    • Ancient Seas
    • Extinctions
    • Evolution
    • The Anthropocene
  • Conservation
    • Fishing
    • Pollution
    • Habitat Destruction
    • Invasive Species
    • Acidification
    • Climate Change
    • Gulf Oil Spill
    • Solutions & Success Stories
    • Get Involved
  • Human Connections
    • Books, Film & The Arts
    • Recreation
    • Seafood
    • Exploration
    • History & Cultures
    • Careers
  • At The Museum
  • Educators

Search Smithsonian Ocean