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- 1From:Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (Vol. 66, Issue 11) Peer-ReviewedWally Johnson and Jack Vallentyne played key roles in the establishment of the Experimental Lakes Area (ELA), which comprises a research team, a set of protected lakes, and a field station, with the mandate to quantify...
- 2From:Aquatic Mammals (Vol. 46, Issue 5) Peer-ReviewedBlair Irvine had a relatively short career as a marine mammalogist, 1965 to 1980. Techniques for working with marine mammals were in the nascent stage then, and, consequently, a lack of experience did not prevent him...
- 3From:Science (Vol. 305, Issue 5682) Peer-ReviewedA half-century ago Jacques Cousteau enthralled the world with his Oscar-winning documentary The Silent World, a paean to the Red Sea and its stunning coral reefs. Few scientists would have the temerity to follow in the...
- 4From:Nature (Vol. 586, Issue 7829) Peer-ReviewedScientists in the discipline and elsewhere say that uncompensated internships and work placements create barriers to inclusion and diversity. Scientists in the discipline and elsewhere say that uncompensated...
- 5From:Marine Fisheries Review (Vol. 70, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedAlfred A. Berzin began to study whales in 1955 at the Pacific Research and Fisheries Center (TINRO) in Vladivostok where he is still working at the present time. (1) In the years before the rapid development of Soviet...
- 6From:Aquatic Mammals (Vol. 45, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedOn 23 December 2017, the marine mammal community around the world lost one of its most outstanding scientists and conservationists after a long battle with cancer. John is survived by his wife, son, and grandson. John...
- 7From:The Chronicle of Higher Education (Vol. 55, Issue 3)Byline: SAM KEAN Fame comes in different forms at the Marine Biological Laboratory. The first is the obvious, name-dropping kind. James Watson of DNA fame once taught here, and Barbara McClintock, the groundbreaking...
- 8From:Science (Vol. 304, Issue 5677) Peer-ReviewedTHE INDIAN OCEAN, 2[degrees]N, 72[degrees]E -- Seven days have rolled by without a sighting. Although the waters over these deep ocean trenches east of the Maldives are a well-known feeding ground for sperm whales, the...
- 9From:Oceanus (Vol. 48, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedJoanna Gyory's Ph.D. plans changed completely when she saw the crabs. It was her third or fourth day at the Liquid Jungle Lab, a research facility on an undeveloped island off Panama's Pacific coast. After a dry...
- 10From:Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (Vol. 70, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedI am pleased to welcome Dr. Yong Chen of the School of Marine Sciences of the University of Maine as the new Co-Editor of the Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences. Dr. Chen's appointment takes effect on 1...
- 11From:Phi Kappa Phi Forum (Vol. 93, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedSeba Breedlove Sheavly (Old Dominion University), 59, "was one of the foremost experts in the world on marine debris and ocean issues," wrote her husband, Bill. "She consulted with organizations as varied as the United...
- 12From:Nature (Vol. 560, Issue 7718) Peer-ReviewedEcologists must understand how marine life responds to changing local conditions, rather than to overall global temperature rise, say Amanda E. Bates and 16 colleagues. Ecologists must understand how marine life...
- 13From:Nature (Vol. 561, Issue 7722) Peer-ReviewedLots of things can and will go wrong in the field, but there are ways to rescue the work and learn from your mishaps. Lots of things can and will go wrong in the field, but there are ways to rescue the work and learn...
- 14From:Nature (Vol. 516, Issue 7531) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Aaron Hirsh (corresponding author) [1] Between Pacific Tides Edward F. Ricketts and Jack Calvin Stanford University Press: 1939. The heroes in a number of John Steinbeck's novels look alike: they are...
- 15From:Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience (Vol. 3, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedIn February of 2015 we held a workshop at the University of Exeter with the goal of creating a conversation among marine biologists, social scientist, and artists around the relationship between life and death. As STS...
- 16From:Nature (Vol. 578, Issue 7795) Peer-ReviewedMarine ecologist Graham Edgar aims to understand how little-noticed undersea species interact, and how humans disrupt that behaviour. Marine ecologist Graham Edgar aims to understand how little-noticed undersea species...
- 17From:Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (Vol. 65, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedRansom Aldrich Myers (Ram) was a mathematically gifted, intellectually pugnacious, and passionately humane scientist committed to the unconstrained communication of science to decision makers and to society (Fig. 1). He...
- 18From:Journal of Shellfish Research (Vol. 27, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedINTRODUCTION As one makes one's way through life, there are a few individuals who make a tremendous difference in shaping one's career and indeed one's life. Melbourne R. Carriker, with his intelligence, charisma,...
- 19From:Nature (Vol. 462, Issue 4273) Peer-ReviewedTo the dock workers and sailors at the port of Catania, in Eastern Sicily, it all looked very suspicious. About once a month during 2005 and 2006, two strangers would walk out to a large wooden cabin at the end of a...
- 20From:Nature (Vol. 537, Issue 7618) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Jeff Tollefson Blue spires seem to pop out of the photograph in one place; a patch of bushy forms of pinkish-purple in another. To the untrained eye, each is distinct and clearly a coral. Then, Manuel...