MarineBio Kids
Once Upon A Tide
Visit Sea Studios Foundation | HealthyOcean.org
Cool sites, games and puzzles online... most involve Marine Biology but some are simply fun. Send us your suggestions today! Enjoy!
All About the Oceans and the Seas - EnchantedLearning.com
Enchanted Learning produces children's educational web sites and games which are designed to capture the imagination while maximizing creativity, learning, and enjoyment.
Archimedes' Laboratory
Site is full of lateral and logical puzzles as well as some quizzes. Once you have started you will want to do all the puzzles....
BBC - Nature - Blue Planet Challenge
Your challenge is to explore as much of the ocean as possible, without losing any of your five lives. Are you ready to take the plunge?
BIOLOGY4KIDS
The Web site that teaches biology fundamentals to children and adults!
Biology Quiz Activities & Games (11 Years or Older)
Dive and Discover is an interactive distance learning Web site by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution designed to immerse you in the excitement of discovery and exploration of the deep seafloor. Dive and Discover brings you right on board a series of research cruises to the Pacific and Indian Oceans, and gives you access to the latest oceanographic and deep submergence research as it happens!
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) - Student Center
Here, students in middle and high school can explore a wide range of environmental issues. Need help with your homework? Need an idea for an environmental club project?
EPA Climate Change Kids Page
The kids page focuses on the science and impacts of global warming or climate change, and on actions that help address climate change issues. It is designed as a resource for both kids and educators. The site also features games, events, and links to other relevant sites for kids and educators.
Fact Monster - Games and Quizzes
Arcade style, educational games and teaching tools for kids and teachers. Pop culture quizzes and crosswords. Flash based, interactive math, science, and word games.
Grand Illusions
A site for the enquiring mind. With optical illusions, scientific toys, visual effects, and even a little magic.
Hawaii's ocean animals, dolphins, whales, sea turtles, and fish. Best games, coloring pages, and educational activities...
Keep Oceans Clean! Ariel and her friends teach you how to keep the oceans clean. Fun!
Kids Against Marine Litter
Find out why marine trash is bad from sources all over the world and see what you can do help.
National Geographic for Kids - Games
The SuperCroc is our favorite...

NATURE: Puzzles & Fun
There are three-sided animal puzzles, animal scrambles, a race across the Steppes, photo tours (India and a safari), two activities involving Koko the signing gorilla, an opportunity to make insect masks, and more.
Oceans Alive! Learn about Australia's ocean life, whales and whale watching, Kelp Forests, Seagrass Meadows, Sponge Gardens, Rippling Sands, Seamounts, cool wet facts, marine life, biodiversity, whale tracking and spotting, and general marine environmental issues suitable for school children!
Planet Ocean @ DiscoverySchool.com
Discover what it takes for amazing ocean animals to survive their underwater world...
SCIENCE - A Closer Look: for grades K though 6 - online classroom lessons by McGraw-Hill with fun shows, games, and puzzles. Also covers Math, Reading, Language Arts, Social Studies, Health and Music.
Scientific Studies : Terrific Trivia Quiz
Science becomes daily ever more specialized. Once upon a time you could be just a scientist and hope to know everything that was to be known. But now there are literally thousands of differentfields of study.
"Sharks!" wordsearch puzzle by Florida Museum of Natural History
"Inside the Shark" wordsearch puzzle by Florida Museum of Natural History
Simon's Cat
OK, this has very little to do with marine life but Simon's cat is so funny we just had to post it. Enjoy!
>^..^< See more movies starring Simon's cat
Virtual Sailor - The virtual sailing simulator
Very cool, marine life including dolphins and sharks, a submarine and lots more to download once you buy it for $25. A MarineBio favorite!
Whale Songs
Listen to the whale song and identify the whale species.
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Marine Biology News :: ScienceDailyFirst-of-its-kind study reveals surprising ecological effects of earthquake and tsunami
The reappearance of long-forgotten habitats and the resurgence of species unseen for years may not be among the expected effects of a natural disaster. Yet that's exactly what researchers have found on the sandy beaches of south central Chile, after an 8.8-magnitude earthquake and devastating tsunami in 2010. Their study also revealed a preview of the problems wrought by sea level rise -- a major symptom of climate change.
Marine food chain becomes clearer with new revelations about prey distribution
A new study has found that each step of the marine food chain is clearly controlled by the trophic level below it -- and the driving factor influencing that relationship is not the abundance of prey, but how that prey is distributed.
Impaired recovery of Atlantic cod: Forage fish or other factors?
Biologists suggest the delay in recovery of Atlantic cod on the eastern Scotian Shelf could be attributed to increased predation by grey seals or other governing factors and not the effect of forage fish as previously thought.
Global warming refuge discovered near at-risk Pacific island nation of Kiribati
Scientists predict ocean temperatures will rise in the equatorial Pacific by the end of the century, wreaking havoc on coral reef ecosystems. But a new study shows that climate change could cause ocean currents to operate in a way that mitigates warming near a handful of islands right on the equator.
Pacific islands on equator may become refuge for corals in a warming climate due to changes in ocean currents
Scientists have predicted that ocean temperatures will rise in the equatorial Pacific by the end of the century, wreaking havoc on coral reef ecosystems. But a new study shows that climate change could cause ocean currents to operate in a surprising way and mitigate the warming near a handful of islands right on the equator. As a result these Pacific islands may become isolated refuges for corals and fish.
Scientists provide first large-scale estimate of reef shark losses in the Pacific Ocean
First study to provide estimates of reef shark losses in the Pacific Ocean are sobering. Researchers noted the enormous detrimental effect that humans have on reef sharks.
Purple sea urchin metamorphosis controlled by histamine
Now that hay fever season has started, sufferers are well aware of the effect of histamines. However it is easy to forget that histamine is also a neurotransmitter involved in controlling memories, regulating sleep, and controlling secretion of gastric acid. New research shows that for the purple sea urchin histamine is also responsible for controlling metamorphosis from a free swimming larval form to the spiny adult living on the sea floor.
Desperate fishwives search for goby males
Breeding is on their minds, as the season draws to an end. Guys drop dead by the hour, making goby girls go all out in their hunt for a mate to father their offspring.
Eight species of wild fish have been detected in aquaculture feed
Researchers have for the first time analyzed a DNA fragment from commercial feed for aquarium cichlids, aquaculture of salmon and marine fish in aquariums. The results show that in order to manufacture this feed, eight species of high trophic level fish have been used, some of them coming directly from extractive fisheries.
Geophysicists employ novel method to identify sources of global sea level rise
As the Earth's climate warms, a melting ice sheet produces a distinct pattern of sea level change known as its sea level fingerprint. Now, geophysicists have found a way to identify the sea level fingerprint left by a particular ice sheet, and possibly enable a more precise estimate of its impact on global sea levels.
Fish larvae find the reef by orienting: The earlier the better
For the first time, a numerical study incorporates horizontal larval fish navigation skills into realistic 3D flow fields, creating a powerful tool that spells out how larvae use environmental cues to find their way back to the reef after being out on the open ocean. This model can be used for a wide variety of marine species.
First fertile, then futile: Ammonites change in reproductive strategy helped them survive three mass extinctions
Ammonites changed their reproductive strategy from initially few and large offspring to numerous and small hatchlings. Thanks to their many offspring, they survived three mass extinctions, a research team has discovered.
Freeing loggerhead turtles comes at a price
Scientists have studied loggerhead turtles' re-adaptation to the environment. The results show that after a lengthy recovery in rehabilitation centers these animals display changes in behavior and may not adapt well to being free.
Higher concentrations of heavy metals found in post-oil spill oysters from Gulf of Mexico, experts say
Scientists have detected evidence that pollutants from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico have entered the ecosystem's food chain. Preliminary results demonstrate that oysters collected post-spill contain higher concentrations of heavy metals in their shells, gills, and muscle tissue than those collected before the spill.
Jellyfish on the rise in world's coastal ecosytems
Jellyfish are increasing in the majority of the world's coastal ecosystems, according to the first global study of jellyfish abundance.
Cod has a key role in the whole Baltic Sea
A new investigation put in evidence the key role of cod as regulator of the whole Baltic Sea ecosystem. The study shows that when the cod population in the central Baltic increases, it spreads into larger areas and spills over into adjacent marginal systems where it usually does not occur, as for example the Gulf of Riga.
BP oil spill, two years later: Natural recovery far greater than expected
This Friday, April 20, will mark two years since the explosion aboard the Deepwater Horizon oil rig caused vast quantities of crude oil to flow into the Gulf of Mexico. But despite the size of the spill, "the natural recovery is far greater than what anybody hoped when it happened," said a professor of biology. "The fears of most people -- that there would be a catastrophic collapse of the ecosystem in the Gulf -- never materialized."
Understanding of hearing in baleen whales amplified
For decades, scientists have known that dolphins and other toothed whales have specialized fats associated with their jaws, which efficiently convey sound waves from the ocean to their ears. But until now, the hearing systems of their toothless grazing cousins, baleen whales, remained a mystery, largely because specimens to study are hard to get. Now, a new study has shown that some baleen whales also have fats leading to their ears.
Ammonites found mini oases at ancient methane seeps
Scientists have shown that ammonites -- an extinct type of shelled mollusk that's closely related to modern-day nautiluses and squids -- made homes in the unique environments surrounding methane seeps in the seaway that once covered America's Great Plains. The findings provide new insights into the mode of life and habitat of these ancient animals.
Twice as many emperor penguins as thought in Antarctica, first-ever penguin count from space shows
A new study using satellite mapping technology reveals there are twice as many emperor penguins in Antarctica than previously thought. The results provide an important benchmark for monitoring the impact of environmental change on the population of this iconic bird, which breeds in remote areas that are very difficult to study because they often are inaccessible with temperatures as low as -58 degrees Fahrenheit.
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