MARS in the News
The Marine Science Program faculty and adjuncts are heavily involved in local community outreach and research activities. Press links for recent community initiatives are provided below, as well as examples of MARS faculty providing local research expertise in the region.
2020
Photo courtesy of NJ.com
Shells Go From Restaurant to Reef to Restore the Bay
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Marine Technology Society Helps Students Discover Careers
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Ƶ Scientists are Streaming Live from the Field
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New Book Details Expedition to Map the Walker Wreck
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Photo courtesy of University of Alaska Fairbanks
2019
Oysters are Showing Researchers How to Restore Barnegat Bay
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Ƶ Receives Grants for Barnegat Bay Projects
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Photo courtesy of Atlantic CIty Press
Marine Science Students Won the AERS Student Presentation Awards
Photo courtesy of AERS News
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Photo courtesy of Dr Anna Pfeiffer-Herbert
Photo courtesy of CBS YouTube video photo
Photo courtesy of Oyster Bay Tackle
Photo courtesy of CBS YouTube video photo
Photo courtesy of Martha Stewart.com
2018
Picture Ƶ....Helping to Map the N.J. Coast
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Photo courtesy of News12
Ƶ Releases Rehabbed Terrapins Back into the Wild
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Ƶ Graduates Present a Decade of Research to Honor Stacy Moore Hagan's Legacy
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Marine Scientists Use Sonar to Tell NJ’s Revolutionary War History
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Image Courtesy of Asbury Park Press
The Mullica Pirates - Asbury Park Press, Friday, January 26, 2018
Image Courtesy of Asbury Park Press
2017
Photo courtesy of NOAA Fisheries Service
Photo courtesy of Ƶ
Image courtesy of OCEARCH/R. Snow
Photo courtesy of The Sandpaper
2016
Marine Field Station Adds New Research Vessel to Fleet
“Ƶ has embraced sustainability in its development and operational practices through the Ƶ Sustainability Initiatives,” said the AASCU, a higher education association of more than 400 public colleges, universities and systems. - Press Release May 2, 2016
Photo Courtesy of Ƶ University
Ƶ Students Search for Seaweed's Succulent Side
"Lacey said the general education course was created to appeal to all students, not just marine science majors, and many of the 25 students were from other disciplines. She said students learn the many ways seaweed is used and do a scavenger hunt in which they have to find 15 items with seaweed." – Diane D'Amico. Press of Atlantic City. 10 May 2016.
Photo Courtesy of Press of Atlantic City.com
"They constructed approximately 300 linear feet of living shoreline consisting of
oyster castles that act as a breakwater and protect about one mile of sandy beach
shoreline and adjacent salt marsh."
– Facebook–USFWS Northeast Region post. 5 April 16.
Photo Courtesy of USFWS Northeast Region
"Lacey said the general education course was created to appeal to all students, not just marine science majors, and many of the 25 students were from other disciplines. She said students learn the many ways seaweed is used and do a scavenger hunt in which they have to find 15 items with seaweed." – Diane D'Amico. Press of Atlantic City. 10 May 2016.
Photo Courtesy of Press of Atlantic City.com
"If we can partner with commercial crabbers on projects like this and others – it's
a win-win in a lot of different ways."
– Steve Evert. NBC10 News Philadelphia. 16 March 2016.
Video Courtesy of NBC 10 Philadelphia
"They recover lost gear that's valuable. Plus, it's a win for the ecosystem because
it's helping any crabs or other species that would end up in the traps - and it benefits
the scientists, because we're collecting accurate data. Forming those ties will make
it easier to do projects together in the future."
– Mark Sullivan. Press of Atlantic City. 13 March 2016.
Photo Courtesy of Press of Atlantic City
"Millions of Americans will spend the next six nights watching hours of documentaries
on sharks as part of the Discovery Channel’s “Shark Week,” an annual summer tradition
that ratchets up interest in the most infamous fish in the sea. For Brick resident
Steve Nagiewicz, it’s a chance to impart an important message about the ocean’s most
maligned species: sharks are worth saving."
– Nee, Daniel. Brick Shorebeat. 6 July 6 2015. Web. 22 February 2016.
Photo Courtesy of Brick Shorebeat
“While the number of humans and sharks in the local ocean waters both increase in the summer, both finding the warmer summer ocean temperatures attractive, "humans just don't know that they are there," said Lacey. – Skeldon, Dan & Nevitt, Cindy. – Press of Atlantic City. 6 July 2015. Web. 22 February 2016.
Photo Courtesy of Wikipedia
Atlantic City Press "Shark no big deal at the shore, Real problem in NJ is man-o-war's sting"
“While the number of humans and sharks in the local ocean waters both increase in the summer, both finding the warmer summer ocean temperatures attractive, "humans just don't know that they are there," said Lacey. – Skeldon, Dan & Nevitt, Cindy. – Press of Atlantic City. 6 July 2015. Web. 22 February 2016.
Photo Courtesy of Press of Atlantic City
“Matthew Landau, a professor of marine science at New Jersey’s Ƶ, cautioned beachgoers against touching a beached Portuguese man-of-war. "Tell the lifeguard,” Landau said, adding that Portuguese man-of-wars “can sting even when they're dead." – ABC News 10 July 2015. Web. 22 February 2016
Photo Courtesy of Press of Atlantic City
"They need hard substrate. That's the key. That's why we need the shell – There could be millions of oyster larvae in the water column, and when they settle down and it's just sandy mud, they're not going to be recruited...–Steve Evert." – Loder, Stephanie. 18 May 2015. Web. 22 February 2016.
Photo Courtesy of Ƶ
"Marine biologists are often asked why certain species seem to be increasing during a particular summer. The answer is not always easy. Here's some advice to better appreciate what you see at the shore this summer." – Sullivan, Mark. "Headed to the Beach". Ƶ Now. Summer 2015. Web. Winter 2016.
Photo Courtesy of Ƶ
Ƶ students in Elizabeth Lacey's Marine Science Class prepare seaweed based dishes to promote seaweed as a food.
“Sharks are these icons of fear in this oasis of relaxation at the beach,” Lacey said Friday. “We want to play up on this natural interest.” – Tracey, Sara. Press of Atlantic City. 3 April 2015. Web. 22 February 2016
Photo Courtesy of Ƶ
Archived Press – 2014