Radio Program

Our regular Science and the SeaTM radio program presents marine science topics in an engaging two-minute story format. Our script writers gather ideas for the radio program from the University of Texas Marine Science Institute's researchers and from our very popular college class, Introduction to Oceanography, which we teach to hundreds of non-science majors at The University of Texas at Austin every year. Our radio programs are distributed at to commercial and public radio stations across the country.

February 1, 2014

Coastal residents have always relied on the bounty of the sea to help sustain them — even if that bounty didn’t always look especially appetizing. About 600 years ago, for example, residents of Carragheen County in Ireland tried a scraggly looking red seaweed, known as rock moss. They found that not only was it a good addition to some of their foods, it made a good medicine and fertilizer, too.

January 25, 2014

Not long after Hurricane Katrina slammed into the Gulf Coast, a local fisherman found an especially good fishing spot off the coast of Alabama. Suspecting that something unusual was going on, he brought out a diver, who found an underwater enchanted forest — giant logs and stumps from an ancient stand of bald cypress. Today, scientists are scrambling to study the forest before it’s destroyed by wood-eating creatures and the Gulf waters.

January 18, 2014

Like the icemaker in your fridge, the cold waters of the Arctic are constantly making chunks of ice. Most of them simply circle around the Arctic before they run aground. But a few survive to reach the North Atlantic shipping lanes.

January 11, 2014

When Spanish explorers first landed on a group of islands off the Pacific coast of South America, they were amazed to find the islands packed with giant tortoises — tens of thousands of them. The explorers called the islands the Galapagos — from the Spanish word for tortoise.

It’s been a tough road for the tortoises ever since. But one group is making a comeback. In 2013, conservationists introduced more than 100 juveniles to tiny Pinzón Island.

January 4, 2014

The 2013 hurricane season tied a record for the era of modern weather observations. The first hurricane, Humberto, didn’t form until September 11th. Since forecasters began using satellites in the 1960s, there’s been only one other season where the first hurricane formed that late.

Yet that’s nothing compared to the hurricane season of 1914. That year, the first tropical storm didn’t form until September 14th — and it was the only storm of the entire season. In fact, 1914 is the weakest Atlantic hurricane season on record.

December 28, 2013

Those tangled, smelly strands of seaweed that wash up on your favorite beach are little islands of life. They attract crabs, turtles, birds, and other creatures. And they can have a profound impact on the native ecosystems around them.

Researchers saw that impact in a series of tests in the Bahamas. They cleared the seaweed from some sections of beach and added it to others. Then they watched what happened over the following year.

December 21, 2013

The colorful clownfish is one of the best tenants in all the oceans. In exchange for protection from predators and a few scraps of food, it protects its household from invaders, keeps things clean, provides key nutrients, and even airs things out.

The clownfish’s home is a sea anemone a mass of swaying tentacles lined with deadly stingers. Just about anything that swims into the tentacles is doomed except the clownfish. Its skin is lined with a layer of mucus that protects the fish from harm.

December 14, 2013

In the early 1900s, one of the great delicacies of American cuisine was turtle soup a mixture of turtle meat, cream, and wine. But turtle soup began disappearing from American tables in the 1930s and ’40s mainly because one of the main ingredients was all but gone: a turtle known as the diamondback terrapin. Overfishing had practically wiped out the little reptile.

December 8, 2013

In August of 1942, a tropical storm churned to life in the Caribbean Sea. It brought heavy rains to Honduras and Belize, plowed across the Yucatan, then hit the coast near Tampico, Mexico. Finally, it slid into the Rio Grande Valley of Texas, where heavy rains damaged the cotton crops before the storm fizzled.

November 30, 2013

The numbers of many species of shorebirds are dwindling the result of loss of habitat, pollution, and other causes. One exception is the Australasian gannet, which inhabits the shores of New Zealand and southern Australia. In Australia alone, thanks to conservation programs and other efforts, its numbers have tripled since 1980.

A mature gannet is about three feet long and has a wingspan of up to five feet. It has a white body with black-tipped wings and a golden head and neck.

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