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 (9)
  • Photo (1)

Article Type

  • Article (4)
  • Personal Perspectives (1)

Topics

  • Acidification (2)
  • Ancient Seas (13)
  • Animal Behavior (6)
  • At The Museum (14)
  • Beaches (6)
  • Books, Film & The Arts (18)
  • Census of Marine Life (8)
  • Climate Change (6)
  • Coasts & Shallow Water (5)
  • Conservation (1)
  • Coral Reefs (7)
  • Deep Sea (37)
  • Evolution (21)
  • Exploration (6)
  • Extinctions (3)
  • Extinctions (5)
  • Fish (27)
  • Fishing (4)
  • Food Web (6)
  • Genetics (1)
  • Get Involved (2)
  • History & Cultures (2)
  • Human Connections (2)
  • Ice (3)
  • Invasive Species (7)
  • Invertebrates (89)
  • Mangroves (5)
  • Marine Mammals (8)
  • Ocean Life (4)
  • Plankton (8)
  • Plants & Algae (5)
  • Poles (10)
  • Pollution (2)
  • Recreation (3)
  • Reptiles (3)
  • Seabirds (2)
  • Seafood (3)
  • Sharks & Rays (7)
  • Shifting Baselines (1)
  • Sights, Sounds & Games (1)
  • Solutions & Success Stories (1)
  • Technology (4)
  • Temperature & Chemistry (5)
  • The Anthropocene (1)
  • The Seafloor (3)
  • Vents & Volcanoes (3)
  • (-) Careers (1)
  • (-) Gulf Oil Spill (3)
  • (-) Microbes (7)

Tags

  • Algae (3)
  • Algae blooms (2)
  • Ancient sea life (2)
  • Antarctic (2)
  • Arctic (3)
  • Art (5)
  • Bacteria (5)
  • Beaches (2)
  • Behind-the-scenes (3)
  • Brian Skerry (7)
  • Carrie Bow Cay (2)
  • Climate Change (2)
  • Coral bleaching (2)
  • Corals (13)
  • Crabs, Shrimp & Relatives (5)
  • Currents (4)
  • Deep-sea corals (4)
  • Deepwater Horizon (24)
  • Defenses (3)
  • DNA barcoding (10)
  • Education (6)
  • Encyclopedia of Life (3)
  • Events (2)
  • Feeding (5)
  • Fossils (2)
  • Geology (4)
  • Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative (38)
  • Jellyfish, Anemones & Relatives (4)
  • Lectures (3)
  • Maps (2)
  • Marine Snow (3)
  • Maritime history (3)
  • Marshes (4)
  • Medicine (5)
  • National Museum of Natural History (11)
  • New discoveries (5)
  • NOAA (8)
  • Oceanography (8)
  • Oil spills (39)
  • Open ocean (2)
  • Paleobiology (2)
  • Penguins (2)
  • Photography (10)
  • Phytoplankton (3)
  • Predation (5)
  • Reproduction (3)
  • Research vessels (14)
  • Restoring Habitats (4)
  • ROVs (5)
  • Runoff (2)
  • Scientists at work (50)
  • Scuba diving (10)
  • Senses (2)
  • Sharks (6)
  • Smithsonian collections (4)
  • Smithsonian Environmental Research Center (3)
  • Smithsonian exhibits (2)
  • Smithsonian scientists (18)
  • Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (4)
  • Squids & Octopuses (5)
  • Technology (21)
  • Under the microscope (18)
  • Vents & Volcanoes (5)
  • Viruses (4)
  • Whales (7)
  • Worms (4)
  • Zooplankton (5)
  • (-) Adaptations (3)
  • (-) Mussels, Oysters & Relatives (3)
  • (-) Symbiosis (5)
  • Sort By Relevance
  • A-Z
  • Z-A
  • Newest
  • Oldest
an oyster shell on a beach
Article

How to Survive an Oil Spill: Oyster Edition

Oysters are powerhouses of water filtration. In a single day, one oyster can filter...
December 2018
Bubbles of methane gas rise through a mussel bed in the Gulf of Mexico.
Photo

Methane Bubbles Up From Seep

Methane gas, trapped deep within the Earth's crust, can slowly leak from cracks in...
Although in reality an ichthyosaur and plesiosaur would have likely never battled, this widely shared lithograph by artist, geologist and paleontologist Henry De la Beche even inspired author Jules Verne to pen a similar scene in his book, Journey to the C
Article

Unearthing History: Mary Anning's Hunt for Prehistoric Ocean Giants

You may not have realized it, but you’ve been acquainted with Mary Anning since...
March 2016
Horizontal bands of color represent different species of lichen that have adapted to the conditions at different heights above sea level.
Article

Seaside Lichens

Very few plant species can survive close to the ocean, where pounding surf fills...
August 2015
A humpback whale breaching.
Personal Perspectives

Bacteria on Whale Skin Tell a Tale of Health and Sickness

Whales swimming in the ocean are never really alone. Even if one swims by itself...
March 2014
A brittle star clings to the branches of a deep sea coral

A Brittle Star May Be a Coral’s Best Friend

Five thousand feet (1,524 meters) beneath the sea in the Gulf of Mexico, an...
August 2017
A close up profile of an adult anglerfish female from the Linophryne family collected in the northern region of the Gulf of Mexico. © 2016 DEEPEND/ Dante Fenolio

Meet the Tiny Bacteria That Give Anglerfishes Their Spooky Glow

Descend two hundred meters (about 656 feet) below the surface and the ocean is...
October 2016
Riftia tubeworm (Riftia pachyptila) colonies near hot spring.

The Microbes That Keep Hydrothermal Vents Pumping

Life is typically sparse on the deep seafloor, where organisms endure high...
March 2016
Tiny "flakes" of marine snow.

Marine Snow: A Staple of the Deep

Snow on land can make some people grumpy, but the magical-looking flakes and a...
January 2013
The whitish spots on this fish are individual parasitic trematode worms.
Article

Marine Parasites: Crazy…and Really Cool!

Marine parasites may be small in size, but they can be present in very high numbers...
December 2012

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