women in marine conservat, Archive Anna Safryghin women in marine conservat, Archive Anna Safryghin

Colombia’s Marine Life Through the Lens of a Camera: An Interview with Mariana Rivera

Deep in the waters of the Caribbean and the Pacific coasts of Colombia, magical and awe-inspiring marine life thrives; from majestic humpback whales, hammerhead sharks and huge groupers, to leatherback turtles, sea snakes and colourful coral reefs. The beauty of Colombia’s marine life has been captured by Mariana Rivera - a colombian biologist, underwater photographer and documentary film-maker.

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Ocean Science in 2020 - 7 News that Will Make You Feel Better about the Past Year.

But here we are, at the start of 2021 (2020 is over, phew), so let’s take a minute to forget about everything that’s gone wrong and think just for a little while, about some of the things that have gone right. Because there are a lot of really great people doing really great things that deserve a bit of recognition too. So sit back (festive beverage optional), relax, and enjoy some of the little wins our big blue friend has achieved this year.

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Coral Reef, Archive Dana Trichario Coral Reef, Archive Dana Trichario

Tales of a Coral Aqauarist

A few years and career moves later, I find myself as an aquarist at the New York Aquarium (NYA). For the first time, I can confidently tell people that my job doesn’t feel like “a job”, which is something I have been wanting to find for a very long time. At NYA, I am one of the aquarist who is primarily in charge of the Conservation Hall galleries.

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Why should we care about ocean acidification?

Before you begin reading this blog, I would like you to take a few seconds to reflect on the following questions: what does ‘ocean acidification’ mean to you? Do you consider that stressors such as marine plastic pollution need more urgent attention? How visible or invisible is ocean acidification in your life?

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Climate Change, Archive Farrah Leone Climate Change, Archive Farrah Leone

Bye-Bye Bivalves

What covers 75% of the earth and has the ability to deteriorate CaCO3, the same material our bones are made up of? Our oceans!

Here’s the chemistry crash course you didn’t ask for: Acidity is measured in pH on a scale of 0 (most acidic/least basic) - 14(most basic/least acidic). Each number on the scale indicates a 10x difference in acidity or alkalinity. Something with a pH of 1 is 10x less acidic than something with a pH of 0. Liquids become more acidic with the presence of positive Hydrogen Ions (hydrogen with less electrons).

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Archive Anna Safryghin Archive Anna Safryghin

An Open Letter: The Anxious Mind of a Marine Scientist World Mental Health Day - October 10

It is not easy to expose my feelings and thoughts while writing this letter. I guess it is the anxious mind crying out to be concealed; telling me that I am making a fool of myself in being vulnerable in front of many strangers. “What will they think of me?”, is the first question that rises in my head. ‘‘Are they going to think that I am a ‘weak’ person?’’ I’ve come to hate that word ‘weak’ but it still resonates in my head when I’m being caught in a whirlwind of thoughts.

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Archive Guest User Archive Guest User

COVID, Anxiety and The New Normal

Fear and excitement filled my body when we got the long anticipated email about returning to the lab after lockdown. I began this year in the West Highlands of Scotland, In a beautiful coastal town called Oban, with a population of 8,500.

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Interviews, Shark Science, Archive Guest User Interviews, Shark Science, Archive Guest User

Sharks, Rays, and Skates…in Northern Ireland?!

Northern Ireland is a small part, of a small island, off the west coast of the United Kingdom. If you’ve heard of my home country then you’re likely to know us for the Giants Causeway (a bunch of basalt columns), the Titanic (the most famous ship that sank), or The Troubles (our troubling history). But there is a valuable part of our heritage that has been lost in cultural memory – our sharks, skates and rays (elasmobranchs).

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Marine Plastics, Archive Farrah Leone Marine Plastics, Archive Farrah Leone

Some Need Straws

At the age of 12, I was on vacation and asked to assist in an emergency wild sea turtle nest removal mission. That day was the a catalyst of my career and my life to protecting nature as a field biologist. I left my home during the pandemic and travelled across the US to work under the National Park Service as a Kemp’s Ridley Biotech. So yeah, I love sea turtles. But I can’t be fully on board with the straw ban.

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Ocean Connectedness in A World of Injustice

World Ocean Day feels a little different this year. Heck, everything does. During this time of the COVID-19 pandemic, and a fight for racial justice, some us have retreated from others, some have sought creative ways to cope with lingering anxiety and the thought of the unknown, and some have taken their anger and sadness to the streets in the form of protests.

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Oceanography, Archive Farrah Leone Oceanography, Archive Farrah Leone

What is Oceanography?

According to the Spruce website, this month is “Expanding Girls' Horizons in Science and Engineering Month”. And according to the WOS blog calendar, this month’s topic is also oceanography. I thought I utilize this opportunity to explain the different types of oceanography for anyone thinking of going into the field or switching careers.

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Archive Farrah Leone Archive Farrah Leone

Reef Rescue Review

If you have never heard of a coral reef before, this is the perfect film to spark your interest in the world of Coral Science. I was immediately drawn in by the question posed by Dr. Ruth Gates: “What’s the risk of doing nothing?”

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