BALTIMORE (WJZ) --Baltimore's Inner Harbor draws a lot of attention, but not in the detail a new project could bring. "There's a new instrument that's come out that's essentially an underwater ...
UC San Diego has created a novel underwater microscope that it says will greatly improve scientists’ ability to study the health of coral reefs — crucial wildlife habitats that also limit coastal ...
The intricate, hidden processes that sustain coral life are being revealed through a new microscope developed by scientists at UC San Diego's Scripps Institution of Oceanography. The diver-operated ...
A new microscopic imaging system is revealing a never-before-seen view of the underwater world. Researchers from Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California San Diego have ...
Toxic blue-green algae has once again been spotted in Lake Okeechobee.Scientists at the FAU Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute recently collected algae samples from Lake Okeechobee near Canal Point ...
Researchers have built a new microscopic imaging instrument that reveals a never-before-seen view of some of the smallest organisms in the world's oceans. WSJ's Monika Auger reports. Photo: Jaffe ...
Our new Benthic Underwater Microscope (BUM) changes that. In building our underwater microscopes, we are inspired by oceanographer Victor Smetacek’s question of whether an in situ computerized ...
An imaging platform developed at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography (SIO) could help reveal new details of coral microstructure and health. Described in Methods in Ecology and Evolution, the ...
An image of the coral Stylophora pistillata taken with the new micrsope, BUMP. Each polyp has a mouth and a set of tentacles, and the red dots are individual microalgae residing inside the coral ...
We imagine researchers will be eager to point the underwater microscope at kelp forests, rocky reefs, sea grass beds and mangroves. For instance, we’re interested in exploring how kelp propagate as ...
Our new Benthic Underwater Microscope (BUM) changes that. In building our underwater microscopes, we are inspired by oceanographer Victor Smetacek’s question of whether an in situ computerized ...