by Admin | Jan 16, 2020 | Fish, Photography, Science
I’ve spent hundreds of hours underwater, and swum with a dozen species of shark. Never have I felt threatened by them, but being close to a titan trigger? I’d keep my wits about... by Admin | Jan 10, 2020 | Fish, Photography
It’s been a number of years since I was fortunate enough to travel to Mauritius, luckily though, I was asked to travel there on assignment at the end of last year, meaning I was able to revisit some great dive sites with some great... by Admin | Jan 9, 2020 | Fish, Photography
I’m a huge fan of the Red Sea’s most common clownfish, Amphiprion bicinctus. It’s a great photography subject, and when hosting in a spectacular anemone, it makes an amazing... by Admin | Jan 7, 2020 | Fish, Photography
One of the joys of the Red Sea is pretty simple: the sheer number of fish, and in terms of numbers alone, there are few fishes in greater number than anthias. I’ve started this post with one of my favorite species, the Red Sea Anthias (Pseudanthias... by Jen Lowy | Dec 23, 2019 | Aquaculture, Conservation, Fish, Sustainability
Aquacultured angel fish are becoming more and more common these days. New species are being successfully raised all the time and its hard to keep track of them all. The multibar angel (Paracentropyge multifasciata) is a hard fish to... by Dr. Mac Terzich | Dec 10, 2019 | Fish, Science, Video
For Design Miami 2019/, we debuted a preview of the ‘Coral City Camera’, a 360° live stream underwater camera located at our collaborative research site with NOAA/ University of Miami’s ACCRETE Lab. The CCC aims to supplement our urban coral research with real-time scientific data and offer a source of natural wonderment to the public, with the live stream officially going live in February 2020. The output of the camera will be broadcast into public schools across Florida through a partnership with the Everglades Foundation. This initiative will reach over 100,000 students, teaching observers to work as citizen scientists with a curriculum that integrates the CCC live stream across 21 school districts. The implementation and associated outreach of the ‘Coral City Camera’ are made possible with the support of Bas Fisher Invitational & the Bridge Initiative under National Endowment for the Arts & Knight Foundation grants. Tags: Coral City Camera, Coral Morphologic, Design Miami, Miami This entry was posted on Saturday, December 7th, 2019 at 2:07 pm and is filed under Art, Installation, Miami, Natural History, Research, Video. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.