Mobile
MarineBio Conservation Society Conservation Marine Life Education/Careers Blog Forums Video Library Marine Life News About Us What's New

MarineBio Resource Directory
Home | What's New | Favorites | Top Rated | Submit Resource | Contact MarineBio

  Search Directory »
Favorited Marine Life Resources indicated by Favorite Sort By: Date | Name | Rating | Favorite
Total Resources: 36 | Displaying: 26 - 36 | Pages: <  1 2
"Specialists in environmental jobs - Climate Change, Conservation & Biodiversity, Low-carbon, Energy & Renewables, Environmental Management.

With over 32,000 unique users each week (120,000+ per month) we are far and away the busiest environmental job site. This is reflected in the diversity of jobs listed with us and our client-base that includes, The Rainforest Alliance, Carbon Disclosure Project, Viridium Associates, Jacobs, Atkins, RSPB, Greenpeace, WWF plus many hun... [More]
Thumbnail Image
Resource Details  | Open Resource  | Submit Review  | Rating (0)  | 2011/02/25  | 938 visits  no rating Report Broken Tell Friend
Marinecareers.net will introduce you to a wide range of marine career fields and to people working in those fields. In addition, it will give those men and women a chance to tell you what they like and dislike about their careers, what they see for the future in their fields, and much more. This site also provides you with some experts' views on what the future holds for marine science careers.
Thumbnail Image
Resource Details  | Open Resource  | Submit Review  | Rating (0)  | 2008/06/28  | 2386 visits  no rating Report Broken Tell Friend
Nonprofit Career Network has been created to fill the needs of the nonprofit sector. Whether you are a job seeker looking for employment opportunities within a nonprofit organization, or you are a nonprofit organization seeking qualified candidates to fill job openings, our complete one-stop resource center will assist you.
Thumbnail Image
Resource Details  | Open Resource  | Submit Review  | Rating (0)  | 2008/06/29  | 1514 visits  no rating Report Broken Tell Friend
OceanExpert is a product developed in 1997 under the auspices of the IODE Group of Experts on Marine Information Management (GE-MIM). OceanExpert is a free product but can be used only for non-profit purposes.

As an individual professional you are welcome to add your information to the database. If you would like to collaborate with the OceanExpert project by coordinating input for your institution or country then please contact us. In order to improve global coverage of the databas... [More]
Thumbnail Image
Resource Details  | Open Resource  | Submit Review  | Rating (0)  | 2008/06/29  | 1320 visits  no rating Report Broken Tell Friend
Marine Science is a very broad field. Check out the following links to find out more about becoming a marine scientist or a marine biologist...
Thumbnail Image
Resource Details  | Open Resource  | Submit Review  | Rating (0)  | 2008/06/29  | 1821 visits  no rating Report Broken Tell Friend
OceansWatch has ongoing requirements for volunteer marine biology or similar discipline graduates to help us undertake our marine conservation programmes. We work on bottom up programmes with small communities in developing countries, assisting them develop marine management programmes. We also work in education and sustainable development. We access the communities by sailing yachts.
Thumbnail Image
Resource Details  | Open Resource  | Submit Review  | Rating (0)  | 2011/01/19  | 728 visits  no rating Report Broken Tell Friend
Search the most comprehensive career database online today. Science Careers offers diverse job listings for the entire scientific community.
Thumbnail Image
Resource Details  | Open Resource  | Submit Review  | Rating (0)  | 2008/06/29  | 1282 visits  no rating Report Broken Tell Friend
Search 5588 Science Jobs...
Thumbnail Image
Resource Details  | Open Resource  | Submit Review  | Rating (0)  | 2008/06/29  | 1489 visits  no rating Report Broken Tell Friend
Get daily email alerts for ALL new jobs, see new jobs 48 hours before others, search the job database...
Thumbnail Image
Resource Details  | Open Resource  | Submit Review  | Rating (0)  | 2008/06/29  | 1457 visits  no rating Report Broken Tell Friend
Please feel free to post Wetland-Related job announcements and/or graduate school opportunities on this web page...
Thumbnail Image
Resource Details  | Open Resource  | Submit Review  | Rating (0)  | 2008/06/29  | 1707 visits  no rating Report Broken Tell Friend
USAJOBS is the Federal Government's official one-stop source for Federal jobs and employment information.
Thumbnail Image
Resource Details  | Open Resource  | Submit Review  | Rating (0)  | 2008/06/29  | 1257 visits  no rating Report Broken Tell Friend
Total Resources: 36 | Displaying: 26 - 36 | Pages: <  1 2

Feedback?

Something missing or incorrect in the above? Let us know!

MarineBio Conservation SocietyMarine Biology News   :: ScienceDaily

Satellite tracking reveals sea turtle feeding hotspots

Satellite tracking of threatened loggerhead sea turtles has revealed two previously unknown feeding "hotspots" in the Gulf of Mexico that are providing important habitat for at least three separate populations of the turtles.

Global extinction: Gradual doom is just as bad as abrupt

Around 250 million years ago, most life on Earth was wiped out in an extinction known as the "Great Dying." Geologists have learned that the end came slowly from thousands of centuries of volcanic activity.

Scientists coax shy microorganisms to stand out in a crowd

Scientists have advanced a method that allowed them to single out a marine microorganism and map its genome even though the organism made up less than 10 percent of a water sample teeming with many millions of individuals from dozens of identifiable groups of microbes.

Heat and cold damage corals in their own ways

Around the world coral reefs are facing threats brought by climate change and dramatic shifts in sea temperatures. While warming has been the primary focus for scientists and ocean policy managers, cold can also cause significant damage. Scientists have shown that cool temperatures can inflict more damage in the short term, but heat is more destructive in the long run.

Are nuisance jellyfish really taking over the world's oceans?

Evidence is lacking that populations of jellyfish and similar gelatinous plankton are surging in numbers globally and will likely dominate the seas in coming decades. Rather, increasing scientific and media interest as well as the lack of good baseline data seem to explain the widespread perception of an increase.

Global experts question claims about jellyfish populations

Blooms, or proliferation, of jellyfish have shown a substantial, visible impact on coastal populations -- clogged nets for fishermen, stinging waters for tourists, even choked intake lines for power plants -- and recent media reports have created a perception that the world's oceans are experiencing increases in jellyfish due to human activities such as global warming and overharvesting of fish. Now, a new study questions claims that jellyfish are increasing worldwide and suggests claims are not supported with any hard evidence or scientific analyses to date.

Are jellyfish increasing in world's oceans?

A global study has questioned claims that jellyfish are increasing worldwide. Blooms, or proliferation, of jellyfish have shown a substantial, visible impact on coastal populations -- clogged nets for fishermen, stinging waters for tourists, even choked intake lines for power plants -- and recent media reports have created a perception that the world's oceans are experiencing increases in jellyfish due to human activities such as global warming and overharvesting of fish. Now, a new global and collaborative study questions claims that jellyfish are increasing worldwide and suggests claims are not supported with any hard evidence or scientific analyses to date.

Southern Indian ocean humpback whales found singing different tunes

Humpback whales on both sides of the southern Indian Ocean are singing different tunes, unusual since humpbacks in the same ocean basin usually all sing very similar songs.

What do killer whales eat in the Arctic?

Killer whales are the top marine predator. The increase in hunting territories available to killer whales in the Arctic due to climate change and melting sea ice could seriously affect the marine ecosystem balance. New research has combined scientific observations with Canadian Inuit traditional knowledge to determine killer whale behavior and diet in the Arctic.

Detecting detrimental change in coral reefs

Over dinner on R.V. Calypso while anchored on the lee side of Glover's Reef in Belize, Jacques Cousteau told Phil Dustan that he suspected humans were having a negative impact on coral reefs. Dustan -- a young ocean ecologist who had worked in the lush coral reefs of the Caribbean and Sinai Peninsula -- found this difficult to believe. It was December 1974. But Cousteau was right. During the following three-plus decades, Dustan, an ocean ecologist and biology professor at the University of Charleston in South Carolina, has witnessed widespread coral reef degradation and bleaching from up close.

Ecologists capture first deep-sea fish noises

Fish biologists conducted one of the first studies of deep-sea fish sounds in more than 50 years, 2,237 feet under the Atlantic. With recording technology more affordable, fish sounds can be studied to test the idea that fish communicate with sound, especially those in the dark of the deep ocean.

Life beyond Earth? Underwater caves in Bahamas could give clues

Discoveries made in some underwater caves by researchers in the Bahamas could provide clues about how ocean life formed on Earth millions of years ago, and perhaps give hints of what types of marine life could be found on distant planets and moons.

Attack or retreat? Circuit links hunger and pursuit in sea slug brain

If you were a blind, cannibalistic sea slug, living among others just like you, nearly every encounter with another creature would require a simple cost/benefit calculation: Should I eat that -- or flee? In a new study, researchers report that these responses are linked to a simple circuit in the brain of the sea slug Pleurobranchaea.

Where there's a worm there's a whale: First distribution model of marine parasites provides revealing insights

Each year around 20,000 people are infected by nematodes of the genus Anisakis and suffer from illnesses ranging from gastrointestinal diseases to serious allergic reactions as a result. For the first time, parasitologists have gathered data on the occurrence of the parasitic worm and have modeled the worldwide distribution of individual species in the ocean. The resulting maps not only enable statements to be made on the occurrence and migration behavior of certain hosts of the parasites, such as Baleen or toothed whales, but also provide conclusions on the risk of human infection.

Turtles' mating habits protect against effects of climate change

The mating habits of marine turtles may help to protect them against the effects of climate change. The study shows how the mating patterns of a population of endangered green turtles may be helping them deal with the fact that global warming is leading to a disproportionate number of females being born.

Life discovered on dead hydrothermal vents

Microbiologists have found that the microbes that thrive on hot fluid methane and sulfur spewed by active hydrothermal vents are supplanted, once the vents go cold, by microbes that feed on the solid iron and sulfur that make up the vents themselves.

Marine mammals on the menu in many parts of world

The fate of the world's great whale species commands global attention as a result of heated debate between pro and anti-whaling advocates, but the fate of smaller marine mammals is less understood, specifically because the deliberate and accidental catching and killing of dolphins, porpoises, manatees, and other warm-blooded aquatic species are rarely studied or monitored.

Lessons in coral reef survival from deep time

Lessons from tens of millions of years ago are pointing to new ways to save and protect today's coral reefs and their myriad of beautiful and many-hued fishes at a time of huge change in the Earth's systems. Today's complex relationship between fishes and corals developed relatively recently in geological terms -- and is a major factor in shielding reef species from extinction, say experts.

Unprecedented, human-made trends in ocean's acidity

Recent carbon dioxide emissions have pushed the level of seawater acidity far above the range of the natural variability that existed for thousands of years, affecting the calcification rates of shell-forming organism.

Carbon dioxide is 'driving fish crazy'

Rising human carbon dioxide emissions may be affecting the brains and central nervous system of sea fishes with serious consequences for their survival, an international scientific team has found. Carbon dioxide concentrations predicted to occur in the ocean by the end of this century will interfere with fishes' ability to hear, smell, turn and evade predators, says a professor.

Help us continue to share the wonders of the ocean with the world, raise awareness of marine conservation issues and their solutions, and support marine conservation scientists and students involved in the marine life sciences. Join the MarineBio Conservation Society or make a donation today. We would like to sincerely thank all of our members and donors, we simply could not have achieved what we have without you and we look forward to doing even more.