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College of Earth, Life, and Health Sciences

Summer is Coming: Bigger and Warmer Than Ever – School of Marine Sciences Seminar

354 Aubert Hall 354 Aubert Hall, Orono, ME, United States

Summer is Coming: Bigger and Warmer Than Ever Recent SST Trends and Phenology Shifts on the US Northeast Continental Shelf Dr. Andrew Thomas Professor of Oceanography School of Marine Sciences UMaine Satellite sea surface temperature (SST) data are used to quantify and map regional differences in trends of SST and SST phenology on the northeast […]

Penobscot Nation Water Resources Program – What WE Do, Why We Do It, and How Is the River Doing?

354 Aubert Hall 354 Aubert Hall, Orono, ME, United States

School of Marine Sciences Seminar Series 354 Aubert Hall. This seminar will also be available via Polycom at Darling Marine Center, Gulf of Maine Research Institute, and Bigelow Laboratories. Dan Kusnierz and Jan Paul The Penobscot Nation Water Resources Program The Penobscot Nation has a responsibility to care for the Penobscot River, the tribe’s lifeblood […]

Oceanography of The Gulf of Maine: Variability and relationships among water masses, red tides, nutrients and acidification

354 Aubert Hall 354 Aubert Hall, Orono, ME, United States

Polycom availability with Darling Marine Center, Gulf of Maine Research Institute, and Bigelow Laboratories. David W. Townsend Professor of Oceanography UMaine School of Marine Sciences Host: Emmanuel Boss This talk will begin as a general overview of how the Gulf of Maine works in an oceanographic sense. But at the outset, I will show examples […]

School of Marine Sciences Seminar: “Stick It Where the Sun Don’t Shine: Advances in the Non-­‐Lethal Study of the Reproductive Biology of Elasmobranchs (sharks, skates, and rays)”

354 Aubert Hall 354 Aubert Hall, Orono, ME, United States

Polycom availability with Darling Marine Center, Gulf of Maine Research Institute, and Bigelow Laboratories. “Stick It Where the Sun Don’t Shine: Advances in the Non-­‐Lethal Study of the Reproductive Biology of Elasmobranchs (sharks, skates, and rays)” Dr. James Sulikowski University of New England Data on maturity state, gestation period, and fecundity are essential for proper conservation and management […]

Stalking Spawning Fishes: Fish Spawning Behavior and Associated Sounds

354 Aubert Hall 354 Aubert Hall, Orono, ME, United States

The School of Marine Sciences presents Dr. Phillip Lobel Boston University Scuba divers are usually oblivious to the soundscape of underwater noises. Exhaled bubbles and boat noise can often mask our being able to hear sonic fishes and "choral" reefs. For these reasons, underwater acoustic ecology has been largely overlooked until recently. Advanced diving technologies […]

Coral Holobiont Members Will Respond Differently to Climate Change

354 Aubert Hall 354 Aubert Hall, Orono, ME, United States

Polycom available at the Darling Marine Center. The School of Marine Sciences and the School of Biology and Ecology present Dr. Mónica Medina Pennsylvania State University Coral holobiont members – […]

Coral Holobiont Members Will Respond Differently to Climate Change

354 Aubert Hall 354 Aubert Hall, Orono, ME, United States

Polycom will be available at the Darling Marine Center. The School of Biology and Ecology and The School of Marine Sciences present Dr. Mónica Medina Pennsylvania State University "Coral Holobiont […]

Insights Into the Red Algae and Eukaryotic Evolution From the Genome of Porphyra Umbilicalis

354 Aubert Hall 354 Aubert Hall, Orono, ME, United States

Dr. Susan Brawley Professor School of Marine Sciences University of Maine   Fossil evidence shows that red algae (Rhodophyta) are one of the most ancient multicellular lineages (1.6 billion years old). Despite their ecological, evolutionary, and commercial importance, few red algal nuclear genomes have been sequenced. This seminar presents results from the recently completed Porphyra […]

Life on Planet Ocean -0 From DNA to #OceanOptimism.

354 Aubert Hall 354 Aubert Hall, Orono, ME, United States

The School of Marine Sciences presents Dr. Nancy Knowlton, Smithsonian Institute Most of the planet is ocean. For centuries its vastness stood in the way of scientific understanding and humancaused damage, but that has now changed. Marine scientists today can take advantage of technologies to understand life in the ocean in ways that were previously […]

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