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  • Norway and Cook Islands put their deep-sea mining plans on pause

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What we know we don’t know: impacts of deep-sea mining on whales, dolphins, sharks, turtles, and other migratory species.
November 20, 2025
Norway and Cook Islands put their deep-sea mining plans on pause.
December 3, 2025
Beyoncé is Right: History Can’t Be Erased
October 23, 2025
Teaching with D&D: My favorite source books for running a great Dungeons & Dragons campaign.
September 23, 2025
9 Quick Questions About Deep-Sea Mining from My Congressional Briefing
September 22, 2025
Help support a new shark science and conservation exhibit in Maryland!
September 15, 2025

My “Follow ocean science and conservation experts on Bluesky and Instagram” assignment

Posted on November 19, 2024 By David Shiffman
My “Follow ocean science and conservation experts on Bluesky and Instagram” assignment
Conservation, Education, Science

As an informal learning assignment, I have my students use social media to follow ocean science and conservation experts for the semester. Each week, they’re asked to check social media for a few minutes, and report on something interesting they learned about marine science or conservation (and why they thought it was interesting.) I’m sharing … Read More “My “Follow ocean science and conservation experts on Bluesky and Instagram” assignment” »

This Rum Protects the Ocean: the world’s first conservation distillery is open for business.

Posted on November 15, 2024November 15, 2024 By Andrew Thaler
This Rum Protects the Ocean: the world’s first conservation distillery is open for business.
Conservation, Featured

Five years ago, a small team of ocean scientists, conservationists, sea turtle patrollers, and distillers came up with a radical idea to create a sustainable, long-term funding model for Dominica’s Sea Turtle Conservation Organization and Ocean’s Forward. From dozens of meetings, market analyses, and viability assessments, the Rosalie Bay Distillery was born. The distillery would … Read More “This Rum Protects the Ocean: the world’s first conservation distillery is open for business.” »

The Good Whale covers the real fight to free Willy

Posted on November 14, 2024 By Andrew Thaler
Popular Culture

Serial is out with a new podcast, and this time, it’s about whales. Return to the early 1990s, when scientists and conservationists fought to save Keiko, the Killer Whale made famous by the movie Free Willy, from his captivity in a small aquatic park. The first two episodes are up on Spotify.

Project 2025, chicken coops, seabed mining, and the classics: 3 Months of readership stats for Southern Fried Science

Posted on October 31, 2024October 31, 2024 By Andrew Thaler
Project 2025, chicken coops, seabed mining, and the classics: 3 Months of readership stats for Southern Fried Science
Blogging

It’s been three months since we posted our last traffic update. I’ve been prepping or traveling since August running OpenCTD workshops and the rest of the team is likewise busy with research, outreach, and policy work. We’ve been quiet, only publishing 12 articles in the last quarter and the traffic reflects that. Traffic is down … Read More “Project 2025, chicken coops, seabed mining, and the classics: 3 Months of readership stats for Southern Fried Science” »

Trump’s Project 2025 and a surprising outbreak of whalepox: this month on the podcasts.

Posted on October 30, 2024 By Andrew Thaler
Trump’s Project 2025 and a surprising outbreak of whalepox: this month on the podcasts.
Conservation, Policy

Late last month, I joined Andrew Kornblatt and Francis Farabaugh on Ocean Science Radio to talk about Donald Trump’s Project 2025 Presidential Transition Project, how it will effect ocean policy, and why the particular nastiness with which Project 2025 goes after NOAA is proof-positive that, no matter how hard they try and deny it, Project 2025 … Read More “Trump’s Project 2025 and a surprising outbreak of whalepox: this month on the podcasts.” »

Giant tube worms dwell in the deep places beneath the ocean floor.

Posted on October 18, 2024October 30, 2024 By Andrew Thaler
Giant tube worms dwell in the deep places beneath the ocean floor.
Featured, Science

Giant deep-sea tube worms. When the RV Knorr arrived above Galapagos Rift in 1977, a team of geologists, geochemists, and geophysicist, including Robert Ballard who would go on to locate the wreck of the Titanic among other ocean-shaping discoveries) was prepared to witness something never before seen: a geyser of superheated, chemical rich water erupting … Read More “Giant tube worms dwell in the deep places beneath the ocean floor.” »

6 Ways to Support the America the Beautiful for All Coalition

Posted on October 7, 2024October 9, 2024 By Angelo Villagomez
6 Ways to Support the America the Beautiful for All Coalition
Conservation, Featured, Policy

The membership of the America the Beautiful for All coalition stretches from the Marianas to Maine, Alaska to Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.  We are the largest, most diverse coalition of its kind to ever exist in the United States. Last week, 170+ conservation, climate change, and community leaders from across the United States … Read More “6 Ways to Support the America the Beautiful for All Coalition” »

The story of the pride flag made from NASA imagery: Bluesky’s most-liked image

Posted on September 27, 2024 By David Shiffman
The story of the pride flag made from NASA imagery: Bluesky’s most-liked image
Science

Last June, a striking image of a pride flag made up of NASA imagery became the most-liked post on the new social media network Bluesky, a post it held for 2 months. I spoke with its creator Rachel Lense about how it was made, and what it’s reception means for inclusion in science. This image … Read More “The story of the pride flag made from NASA imagery: Bluesky’s most-liked image” »

My remarks for Biodiversity Leaders for Harris Walz

Posted on September 26, 2024 By David Shiffman
My remarks for Biodiversity Leaders for Harris Walz
Conservation, Science

On Thursday, September 26th, I spoke on a “Biodiversity Leaders for Harris-Walz” zoom call. This is the text of my remarks, including links to learn more. Good evening. I’m Dr. David Shiffman, an ocean conservation scientist who studies threats to marine life and how we can solve those problems using wise evidence-based policymaking, through equitable … Read More “My remarks for Biodiversity Leaders for Harris Walz” »

Comparing the OpenCTD to a YSI Castaway

Posted on September 21, 2024September 21, 2024 By Andrew Thaler
Comparing the OpenCTD to a YSI Castaway
Education, Featured, Oceanography for Everyone

For close to two decades now, the venerable YSI Castaway has been the gold standard for small, relatively cheap, handheld CTDs. In the early days of OpenROV, the robot’s little payload bay was sized explicitly to fit a Castaway. When Kersey and I started building the OpenCTD, our benchmark for viability was how well the … Read More “Comparing the OpenCTD to a YSI Castaway” »

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