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Gwen Noda

Effects of CO2 on Coral Reefs - 0 views

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    NOAA's Coral Literature, Education & Outreach (CLEO) Background Information
Gwen Noda

Watch. Explore. Discover. | Ocean Today - 0 views

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    Ocean Today Kiosk Online This website provides access to current and archived videos of the Ocean Today kiosk at the Sant Ocean Hall in the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History. The Ocean Today Kiosk is a dynamic, visitor-friendly multi-media experience that illustrates both the ocean's influence on humans and their influence upon the ocean. The website offers a transcript of the video along with links for more information.
Gwen Noda

Life in Extreme Environments | The Astrobiology Web | Your Online Guide to the Living U... - 0 views

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    Life in Extreme Environments The Astrobiology Web offers this list of links about life in extreme environments. Subjects include general information, thermophilic life, deep ocean thermal vents, recommended books, and more.
Gwen Noda

Endangered Species Bulletin - 0 views

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    Endangered Species Bulletin The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service offers the quarterly Endangered Species Bulletin, with information on rulemakings, recovery plans and activities, conservation partnerships, research developments, and a variety of other issues. The Summer 2009 issue was focused entirely oceans and includes articles on corals, sea turtles, the Hawaiian Monk Seal, and more.
Gwen Noda

http://www.nero.noaa.gov/nero/nr/nrdoc/10/10PSP2011ExtensionPHL.pdf - 0 views

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    Northeast - Red Tide/Shellfish Closure Extension Through December 31, 2011 At the request of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, NOAA Fisheries Service has extended the temporary paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) closure through December 31, 2011, due to the presence of high levels of the toxin that causes PSP. See a chart of the closure area. NOAA Fisheries Service may terminate the emergency regulations at an earlier date by publishing a notice of termination in the Federal Register if information becomes available indicating such action is warranted.
Gwen Noda

YouTube - NASA: Climate Change And the Global Ocean [720p] - 2 views

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    We know climate change can affect us, but does climate change alter something as vast, deep and mysterious as our oceans? For years, scientists have studied the world's oceans by sending out ships and divers, deploying data-gathering buoys, and by taking aerial measurements from planes. But one of the better ways to understand oceans is to gain an even broader perspective - the view from space. NASA's Earth observing satellites do more than just take pictures of our planet. High-tech sensors gather data, including ocean surface temperature, surface winds, sea level, circulation, and even marine life. Information the satellites obtain help us understand the complex interactions driving the world's oceans today - and gain valuable insight into how the impacts of climate change on oceans might affect us on dry land.
Gwen Noda

Fossil Evidence for Evolution of the Shape and Color of Penguin Feathers - 0 views

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    "Penguin feathers are highly modified in form and function, but there have been no fossils to inform their evolution. A giant penguin with feathers was recovered from the late Eocene (~36 million years ago) of Peru. The fossil reveals that key feathering features, including undifferentiated primary wing feathers and broad body contour feather shafts, evolved early in the penguin lineage. Analyses of fossilized color-imparting melanosomes reveal that their dimensions were similar to those of non-penguin avian taxa and that the feathering may have been predominantly gray and reddish-brown. In contrast, the dark black-brown color of extant penguin feathers is generated by large, ellipsoidal melanosomes previously unknown for birds. The nanostructure of penguin feathers was thus modified after earlier macrostructural modifications of feather shape linked to aquatic flight. "
Gwen Noda

USC researcher experiments with changing ocean chemistry | 89.3 KPCC - 0 views

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    "USC researcher experiments with changing ocean chemistry Jan. 19, 2011 | Molly Peterson | KPCC In his lab, USC's Dave Hutchins is simulating possible future atmospheres and temperatures for the Earth. He says he's trying to figure out how tiny organisms that form the base of the food web will react to a more carbon-intense ocean. Burning fossil fuels doesn't just put more carbon into the atmosphere and help warm the climate. It's also changing the chemistry of sea water. KPCC's Molly Peterson visits a University of Southern California researcher who studies the consequences of a more corrosive ocean. Tailpipes and refineries and smokestacks as far as the eye can see in Los Angeles symbolize the way people change the planet's climate. They remind Dave Hutchins that the ocean's changing too. Hutchins teaches marine biology at USC. He says about a third of all the carbon, or CO2, that people have pushed into earth's atmosphere ends up in sea water - "which is a good thing for us because if the ocean hadn't taken up that CO2 the greenhouse effect would be far more advanced than it is." He smiles. Hutchins says that carbon is probably not so good for the ocean. "The more carbon dioxide that enters the ocean the more acidic the ocean gets." On the pH scale, smaller numbers represent more acidity. The Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute estimates we've pumped 500 million tons of carbon into the world's oceans. Dave Hutchins at USC says that carbon has already lowered the pH value for sea water. "By the end of this century we are going to have increased the amount of acid in the ocean by maybe 200 percent over natural pre-industrial levels," he says. "So we are driving the chemistry of the ocean into new territory - into areas that it has never seen." Hutchins is one of dozens of scientists who study the ripples of that new chemistry into the marine ecosystem. Now for an aside. I make bubbly water at home with a soda machine, and to do that, I pump ca
Gwen Noda

Science News for Kids: Home Page - 0 views

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    "Since 2003, this online sibling to Science News - the award-winning magazine - has been at the forefront of science education. It highlights developments from all science disciplines, delivering the information to the screens of computers in schools and households across the world."
Gwen Noda

ClimateWatch Magazine ยป The New Climate Normals: Gardeners Expect Warmer Nights - 0 views

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    Defining normal Gardeners, meteorologists, businesses, weather junkies and others will get answers to some of these questions in July, when NOAA's National Climatic Data Center (NCDC) releases the latest version of an official weather product called the U.S. Climate Normals. Updated each decade, the U.S. Climate Normals are 30-year averages of many pieces of weather information collected from thousands of weather stations nationwide. Each time they are updated, an old decade is dropped, and a new one added. Starting in July, when you hear that a day was hotter, or colder, or rainier than normal, that "normal" will be a little different from what it was in the past.
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