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Fishing for Sharks in the Gulf of Mexico

Our scientists spend months at sea every year, conducting various scientific surveys to collect vital data on many different marine species. One such survey is the Bottom Longline Survey conducted by the Southeast Fisheries Science Center.
July 17, 2018 - Feature Story ,
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GulfCorps Successfully Completes First Year of Conservation Work

NOAA and partners have completed the first year of GulfCorps, a first-ever region-wide youth conservation corps program across the Gulf Coast.
July 06, 2018 - Feature Story ,
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Habitat Matters: Fish Passage

Celebrating Habitat Month
June 21, 2018 - Feature Story ,
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Habitat Matters: Coral and Coral Reefs

Celebrating Habitat Month
June 21, 2018 - Feature Story ,
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Habitat Matters: Marshes

Celebrate Habitat Month with us and learn more about importance of marshes and NOAA's role in protecting them.
June 21, 2018 - Feature Story ,
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New Species Named for NOAA Fisheries Scientist

NOAA Fisheries veterinarian/sea turtle pathologist Dr. Brian Stacy recently became the first Office of Protected Resources scientist to have a new species named after him. His former colleagues announced the discovery of a previously unidentified parasite
June 15, 2018 - Feature Story ,
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Leatherbacks Tagged for First Time off North Carolina

New Suction-Cup Tag to be Tested
June 14, 2018 - Feature Story ,
Head of a leatherback turtle breaking the surface of the water.

Tagging Sea Turtles

Chassahowitzka Bay, Florida
June 12, 2018 - Feature Story ,
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Meet NOAA sea turtle biologist Ben Higgins

Ben manages the NOAA sea turtle facility located in Galveston, Texas.
June 12, 2018 - Feature Story ,
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Faces of Sea Turtle Conservation: Dr. Cali Turner Tomaszewicz, National Research Council Research Associate

A new technique developed by three NOAA Fisheries scientists is giving us more insight than ever before on sea turtle populations, extracting life history and other information from sea turtle bones. The technology combines bone dating, or “skeletochronology,” and the sequential sampling of annual growth rings in sea turtle bones to identify chemical signatures including stable carbon and nitrogen isotope ratios. Meet the scientists behind this new technology and how it is helping guide the way we protect and conserve sea turtles.
June 06, 2018 - Feature Story ,
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