New England Red Tide typically occurs every year in the Gulf of Maine and is caused by an algal species called Alexandrium fundyense. Blooms of Alexandrium fundyense are commonly called red tide, but scientists prefer the term harmful algal bloom (HAB) because blooms may have harmful impacts even when the water is not discolored. More...
Thirteen staff from the Office of Ocean and Coastal Resource Management’s Estuarine Reserves Division (ERD) recently got hands-on experience with nesting ospreys when they accompanied naturalist Greg Kearns as he banded some of the season’s newly hatched chicks in the Jug Bay component of the Chesapeake Bay Maryland National Estuarine Research Reserve. More...
On June 11, hundreds of children from Washington, DC, descended on the National Mall to learn about the importance of protecting our nation’s watersheds through art. More...
Ten years ago, a small plane piloted by the son of former U.S. President John F. Kennedy crashed into the Atlantic Ocean in an accident that drew attention from all around the world. More...
“Treat the Earth well; it was not given to you by your parents, it was loaned to you by your children.”
These words were delivered by NOS Assistant Administrator John H. Dunnigan at the 11th Annual Waterkeeper Alliance Conference. More...
The decline and loss of coral reefs has significant social, cultural, economic, and ecological impacts on people and communities in the U.S. and around the world. More...
Historic current survey data are now available online, providing users with faster, friendlier, and easier access to historical current information. More...
NOAA’s “air gap” technology received the ultimate test on the morning of June 27. The technology passed with flying colors as the new U.S. Navy LPD ship, the USS New York, sailed down the Mississippi River, clearing the underside of the Huey P. Long Bridge just north of downtown New Orleans by 64 centimeters (2.1 feet). More...