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

Search

Showing results for "All"
Filter

Content type

  • Article (20)

Article Type

  • (-) Article (20)
  • Personal Perspectives (30)
  • Young Voices (2)

Topics

  • Ancient Seas (2)
  • Animal Behavior (3)
  • At The Museum (6)
  • Beaches (1)
  • Books, Film & The Arts (2)
  • Careers (1)
  • Coasts & Shallow Water (3)
  • Coral Reefs (8)
  • Evolution (2)
  • Exploration (5)
  • Extinctions (1)
  • Fish (3)
  • Fishing (3)
  • Food Web (2)
  • Genetics (1)
  • Get Involved (2)
  • Gulf Oil Spill (1)
  • History & Cultures (1)
  • Human Connections (1)
  • Invertebrates (3)
  • Marine Mammals (3)
  • Ocean Life (1)
  • Plants & Algae (2)
  • Pollution (4)
  • Reptiles (1)
  • Seafood (2)
  • Sharks & Rays (2)
  • Solutions & Success Stories (1)
  • Technology (3)
  • Through Time (1)

Tags

  • Algae (9)
  • Algae blooms (4)
  • Ancient sea life (6)
  • Apex predator (2)
  • Arctic (3)
  • Art (2)
  • Ballast Water (3)
  • Beaches (8)
  • Biodiversity (9)
  • Bycatch (2)
  • Citizens of the Sea (2)
  • Climate Change (12)
  • Coral bleaching (3)
  • Crabs, Shrimp & Relatives (9)
  • Currents (3)
  • Darwin (2)
  • Deepwater Horizon (13)
  • Defenses (2)
  • DNA barcoding (4)
  • Dolphins & Porpoises (3)
  • Education (7)
  • Endangered species (12)
  • Events (3)
  • Feeding (5)
  • Fisheries (14)
  • Fossils (7)
  • Geology (7)
  • Glaciers (2)
  • Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative (15)
  • Ice (3)
  • Jellyfish, Anemones & Relatives (3)
  • Lionfish (2)
  • Mangroves (2)
  • Maps (3)
  • Maritime history (5)
  • Mussels, Oysters & Relatives (5)
  • National Museum of Natural History (21)
  • Native people (3)
  • New discoveries (5)
  • News (4)
  • NOAA (8)
  • Oceanography (2)
  • Ocean Optimism (4)
  • Ocean Trash (6)
  • Oil spills (14)
  • Photography (3)
  • Phytoplankton (2)
  • Predation (8)
  • Protecting Spaces (6)
  • Reproduction (5)
  • Research vessels (4)
  • Restoring Habitats (3)
  • Scientists at work (7)
  • Seagrass (4)
  • Sea stars & Urchins (3)
  • Sea turtles (6)
  • Senses (7)
  • Shark finning (3)
  • Sharks (11)
  • Skates and rays (2)
  • Smithsonian collections (6)
  • Smithsonian Environmental Research Center (6)
  • Smithsonian exhibits (9)
  • Smithsonian Marine Station at Ft. Pierce (4)
  • Smithsonian scientists (26)
  • Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (3)
  • Snails & Slugs (2)
  • Sponges (2)
  • Squids & Octopuses (2)
  • Sustainable Seafood (6)
  • Symbiosis (4)
  • Tagging (3)
  • Technology (13)
  • Tides (2)
  • Tsunamis (2)
  • Tuna (4)
  • Under the microscope (5)
  • Vents & Volcanoes (2)
  • Waves (2)
  • Whales (18)
  • Women in Science (5)
  • Zooplankton (2)
  • (-) Corals (12)
  • (-) Migration (4)
  • (-) Paleobiology (2)
  • Sort By Relevance
  • A-Z
  • Z-A
  • Newest
  • Oldest
Fossil mosasaur skull and partial skeleton sitting in what looks like the dirt it was excavated from.
Article

If You Build An Ocean, Sea Monsters Will Come

Building a productive ocean is complicated. The process is long (on the order of...
October 2018
Walter Adey and the NMNH coral reef tank
Article

The Evolution of a Reef Aquarium

In the late 1970s, Walter Adey, a paleobiologist and coral reef researcher at the...
October 2017
An unidentified earplug from the National Museum of Natural History collection.
Article

Ocean Objects of Wonder

As humans, we are constantly learning. Not only as individuals from the moment we...
March 2017
Neptune grass (Posidonia oceanica) is a slow-growing and long-lived seagrass native to the Mediterranean.
Article

Bugs and Slugs: The Hidden Secret to Healthy Seagrasses

Slip into the water along a sheltered coast in nearly any part of the world and...
May 2015
Tiny jellies in a petri dish.
Article

Fishing for Plastic: Science in the Great Pacific Garbage Patch

By now, you have probably heard of The Great Pacific Garbage Patch. The name...
April 2015
A "reef hotel" made of PVS layers on the seafloor.
Article

Worth the Investment: Ocean Real Estate Reveals Hidden Diversity

Good real estate is hard to find. This is as true underwater as it is on land. So...
February 2015
The coastline of American Samoa National Marine Sanctuary
Article

The Reefs of American Samoa: A Story of Hope

Sometimes called the rainforests of the sea, coral reefs are incredibly diverse and...
September 2014
Fossil Whale Digsite at Cerro Ballena, Chile
Article

The Whale Graveyard Whodunit

One of the ocean's tiniest organisms often does the most harm. Microscopic algae...
March 2014
A Caribbean hermit crab (Coenobita clypeatus) crawls on the forest floor.
Article

The Great Hermit Crab Migration

Over the last few days, a video of hermit crabs stampeding across the rocky shores...
September 2012
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
Giant Pacific Manta Ray, Roca Partida Sea Mount, Revillagigedos Islands, Mexico
Article

Tagging and Tracking Animals Underwater

How do we know where ocean animals swim day and night? Scientists are getting...
May 2012
Large numbers of grey reef sharks were observed at Jarvis Island, an uninhabited Pacific island, during the 2010 Pacific RAMP expedition of the NOAA Ship Hi'ialakai.
Article

Reef Sharks Repelled by People

Reef sharks rarely get any love. These sharks, comprising several species, loiter...
April 2012

Pagination

  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Next page Next
  • Last page Last

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