October 23rd, 2019
Marine scientists tout ocean protection progress, give road map for more
More progress is urgently needed to protect the ocean, OSU scientists reported at the Our Ocean Conference.
More progress is urgently needed to protect the ocean, OSU scientists reported at the Our Ocean Conference.
The Alexei Lubchenco Menge fellowship introduced in 2019 is opening new opportunities for biology and zoology students interested in ecology and field work.
Ocean-based actions have greater potential to fill in gaps in climate change mitigation than previously appreciated, marine ecologist Jane Lubchenco explains in a paper published […]
Statistician Lisa Madsen and collaborators help estimate the total mortality of birds and bats at wind farms.
Two new grants will assist marine scientists at Oregon State University to make significant progress in global ocean protection.
Sally Hacker helped lead a team of scientists who developed a mathematical model that predicts the evolution of the beach profile.
Marine ecologist Sarah Henkel glued acoustic tags onto 10 Dungeness crabs to learn more about their movements.
Distinguished marine ecologist Jane Lubchenco proposes a “new narrative for the ocean” in an editorial published in the journal Science.
A recipient of the SURE Science award, biology senior Sean Trobaugh studied the symbiotic relationship between algae and sea anemones.
The findings, published in Nature Communications, add fresh insight to the fight to save the Earth’s embattled coral reefs.
The College of Science highlights successes from 2017-18 from groundbreaking research on ocean acidification and earthquake forecasting to dangers affecting coral reefs.
Graduate students find that countries did actually honor the more than 200 ocean conservation promises they made four years ago.
Ecologist’s video on ocean acidification makes a profound impact with legislators at the Oregon Coastal Caucus Economic Summit.
A new $1.1 million grant led by ecologist Francis Chan will track and measure the effects of hypoxia on marine species and habitats in Oregon.
Manta rays’ feeding mechanism may hold clues to a new, improved filtration system.
Genetic research has shed new light on how isolated populations of the same species evolve toward reproductive incompatibility and thus become separate species.
Nearly 400 scientists and acclaimed science writer Ed Yong will participate in the 9th International Symbiosis Society Congress at OSU.