BROTMAN COASTAL BIOLOGY LECTURE SERIES



Members of the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute at the University of N. Florida in Jacksonville, have the opportunity to attend the following set of lectures put on by the UNF Biology Department.

Thursday, September 25, 8pm
Dr. Nancy Rabalais, Executive Director and Professor at the Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium, will lecture on the Dead Zone in the Gulf of Mexico at at The University Center at UNF.
Humans are having a large negative impact on the Gulf of Mexico ecosystem. Due to excess run-off humans are unintentionally depositing high levels of nutrients into the Gulf. These nutrients serve as supplements to promote the growth of algae. This gives rise to large blooms. Once the blooms start to decay bacteria will consume the waste material. The more bloom material that is present, the more bacteria will thrive. These bacteria are capable of depleting oxygen levels in the Gulf thus robbing other organisms (fish, crabs, etc) of the oxygen levels they require to live.

Thursday, October 23, 8pm
Dr. Chuck Amsler, a biology professor at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and Maggie Amsler, a research assistant at the same university, will discuss Antarctic Marine Biology at The University Center at UNF.
Chuck and Maggie Amsler are a husband and wife research team who travel with their students to the Antarctica each winter and study life under the ice. Their personal experience, photographs and movie clips provide a fantastic perspective of the Antarctic Ocean. Their many discoveries document a diversity of life and interactions between ice, algae, and animals of the Antarctic seldom examined in documentaries about the Antarctic.

Thursday November 20, 8pm
Dr. Ann Pabst, Graduate coordinator and assistant chair in the Department of Biology and Marine Science at The University of North Carolina Wilmington, will discuss marine mammals at The University Center at UNF.
Professor Ann Pabst is a renowned Marine Mammologist who examines whales and dolphins from a perspective seldom considered by the public. How can these animals which are descended from land animals swim, hold their breath so long, and withstand the pressure of diving so deep? Of course, she also is involved with understanding why these animals die from interactions with us humans and works with various groups trying to limit the deaths of these majestic animals.

All lectures are free and open to the public.



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