#monterey bay aquarium

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montereybayaquarium:

a male sea turtle hatchling is a son of a beach* 


*and by that we mean sea turtles hatch in the sand and their sex is determined by the sand’s temperature and cooler temps produce males so climate change and warming sands are gonna be tough on these sons of beaches :/

Please imagine a sophisticated scientist in a lab coat and glasses saying the first line to a lecture hall of students.

unlettered-heathen:satan-666s-stuff:imnotoverlyobsessive: bogleech:This is the funniest and most thounlettered-heathen:satan-666s-stuff:imnotoverlyobsessive: bogleech:This is the funniest and most tho

unlettered-heathen:

satan-666s-stuff:

imnotoverlyobsessive:

bogleech:

This is the funniest and most thoughtful I’ve ever seen an organization use a meme and it’s good people with good goals who don’t just want your money on top of it

For those of you who aren’t aware the Monterey Bay Aquarium is actually a really cool place!

• they are non-profit

• they have a living kelp forest!

• it focuses on local ocean wildlife

• they were the first aquarium to get a great white shark to eat and they are the only public aquarium to display a great white shark for more than sixteen days

• they have a seafood watch program where they promote sustainable seafood

• they are actively fighting against ocean pollution

So yeah support them, they’re awesome and I love them

They also have a tumblr @montereybayaquarium

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montereybayaquarium:

Purple-striped jellies or forbidden peppermints?

montereybayaquarium:

mbari-blog:

Go behind the scenes with our scientists and ROV pilots on June 30!⁠ 

We’ll be streaming #LivefromtheDeep on an MBARI expedition to Sur Ridge—an underwater oasis of deep-sea corals and sponge gardens just off the coast of northern California, near Big Sur. MBARI’s remotely operated vehicles and state-of-the-art cameras let our scientists see the amazing creatures that call Sur Ridge home, and high-resolution mapping tools create stunning images of the seafloor.⁠

Join us on June 30 at 11:00 a.m. (Pacific) and see live footage of the seafloor, ask our scientists and engineers your questions, and find out what it’s like to have a career exploring the deep ocean.⁠ Tune in to the livestream on MBARI’s website,  YouTube, Facebook, or Twitter.

We’ll deep sea you soon! More info about this exciting live dive here: https://www.mbari.org/live-from-the-deep-sur-ridge/

montereybayaquarium:

Just a bb two-spot octopus cutethulhu to bless your timeline for Cephalopod Week

montereybayaquarium:

montereybayaquarium:

montereybayaquarium:

Imagine you’re trying to eat a snack—a tasty sustainable fish taco, let’s say. But there’s no plate, no cutlery, and you can’t use your hands. Also, gravity is muted, so the taco has a frustrating tendency to float away between bites.

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Sea turtles use their flippers in a multitude of ways to help them capture prey, like this green sea turtle in the Gulf of Thailand that’s grasping a jelly before it eats.  Photo ©Rich Carey/Shutterstock.com

If this sounds difficult, you’re beginning to understand the challenge of being a hungry sea turtle, stuck with awkward flippers more useful for moving around than for grasping prey.

Still, sea turtles make do with what they have. And, as it turns out, they can (and do) use their forelimbs to corral, swipe and hold food.

Their behavior is the subject of a new publication by Monterey Bay Aquarium researchers Jessica FujiiandDr. Kyle Van Houtan. It’s something that’s been noted in passing in scientific literature, but Jessica and Kyle say it’s a fascinating glimpse into the evolution of ocean creatures.

To illustrate, Jessica points to a photo of a green sea turtle taken in open water in the Gulf of Thailand. Between its flippers, it’s holding a tasty meal: not a fish taco, but a spherical jellyfish nearly the size of the turtle itself.

Getting a grip on a meal

“In the open ocean environment, there isn’t much to help this sea turtle keep its food in place,” Jessica explains. “So in the picture, he’s using his flippers to keep the meal from drifting away while grabbing pieces with his mouth.”

Hawksbill and loggerhead sea turtles have also been spotted using their flippers to forage. In another image, a loggerhead seems to roll a scallop against the seafloor.

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A loggerhead sea turtle leverages a scallop against the seafloor to open its shells before eating the meat inside. Photo courtesy Coonamessett Farm Foundation

“It has to get the two halves of the shell open to get inside,” Jessica says. “It’s using its flipper to push down the shell part, and with its mouth it’s pulling out the meat.”

Jessica is part of the Aquarium’s sea otter research team where she has explored topics in ecomorphology—the nexus of evolution, behavior and body form. She previously co-authored a paper investigating the origins of tool use by sea otters, which use their paws when foraging.

“Sea turtles’ limbs have evolved mostly for locomotion, not for manipulating prey,” she says. “But that they’re doing it anyway suggests that, even if it’s not the most efficient or effective way, it’s better than not using them at all.”

Hardwired evolutionary behavior

Similar behaviors have been documented in marine mammals from walruses to seals to manatees. But sea turtles are far more ancient, appearing in the fossil record around 100 million years earlier.

Kyle, who directs the Aquarium’s science program, says seeing this behavior in turtles was a surprise—one that raises questions about which traits are learned and which are hardwired.

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Researchers were surprised to find sea turtles using their flippers in sophisticated ways while feeding — like this one holding onto its prey.

“With a highly intelligent, adaptive social animal, we expect these things to happen,” he says. Otters, for example, have social structures packed with opportunities to watch and learn the subtleties of dexterous foraging.

“With sea turtles, it’s different; they never meet their parents,” Kyle says. “They’re never trained to forage by their mom. It’s amazing that they’re figuring out how to do this without any training, and with flippers that aren’t well adapted for these tasks.”

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Sea otters use their dexterous paws when foraging, but them must learn the behavior from their mothers. Photo © Jessica Fjuii/Monterey Bay Aquarium

How developmental biology predisposes animals to adopt dining strategies is of particular interest, given the Aquarium’s efforts to raise stranded sea otter pups and prepare them for a return to the wild. Before they’re released, ecologically naïve pups have to be taught foraging behaviors, be it for crabs or abalone, by adult female sea otters at the Aquarium.

“What we’re trying to understand is how to have the best sea otter surrogacy program,” Kyle says. “Sea otters and sea turtles are in some respects at opposite ends of the spectrum. However, learning about one, can help us with the other.”

Hiding in plain sight

For Kyle, inspiration for the flipper study came in 2016 when he was a sober driver for a coral reef conference after-party. While ferrying colleagues back to their hotels in Waikiki, one of his passengers learned of Kyle’s recent paper on hawksbill sea turtles. The passenger mentioned a field research project of his own which involved his team placing sea anemones on a reef in Tahiti. Day after day, the anemones kept disappearing, until the team set out a camera and identified the culprit: a hawksbill turtle.

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Foraging sea turtles use their flippers in a variety of ways, In Moorea, this hawksbill turtle braces itself against the coral to feast on a sea anemone.

Based on that chance encounter, Kyle watched the video—and noticed something striking.

“What jumped out at me was as soon as this hawksbill turtle bit an anemone, it put both its flippers on the reef and pushed to get leverage and rip it loose.”

That’s a behavioral trait associated with more evolved groups like mammals, he says—not turtles.

“When you see sea turtles foraging, they eat with their mouths,” Kyle explains. “You see critter-cam footage of a leatherback finding a jelly in its line of sight, swimming toward it, biting it and moving on. A green turtle close to the seafloor, seeing a plant rooted on the bottom—you see them lunging and biting it and moving on. Or a hawksbill that puts its head down in cavities in coral reefs gathering sponges—they’re always using their beak.”

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Crowd-sourced photos and videos helped the researchers document the surprising extent to which sea turtles use their flippers when they forage.

Kyle was intrigued. Investigating the phenomenon at scale could’ve been an epic undertaking—hundreds of hours of work, he says—but he and Jessica realized they could effectively crowd-source the footage they were looking for.

“I started Googling and was surprised how many people have captured this behavior,” Jessica says. Thanks to the advent of ubiquitous cameras and massive digital archives like YouTube, a trove of documentation was already available online. “A good number of these videos are just taken by the general public on vacation.”

“I was surprised that even though there are videos showing these behaviors, the topic hadn’t been explored before in this depth,” she says. Then again, the ocean is full of surprises: “I think there’s still a lot we haven’t seen.”

Daniel Potter

Fujii, J, McLeish, D, Brooks, A, Gaskell, J, Van Houtan, K. (2018) Limb-use by foraging marine turtles, an evolutionary perspective. 

Bumping this turtley awesome bit of research from our science team for World Turtle Day! ❤️

It’s World Sea Turtle Day, turtley awesome friends—give yourselves a hand! And while you’re at it, check out this bump of a paper from Aquarium scientists about how sea turtles use their flippers in surprising ways!

montereybayaquarium:

Can’t be grumpy when you’re lookin’ at these lumpies!

We got a new Critter Corner video for all you fronds who are suckers for our lil’ deep sea lumpfish buds, sea for yourself!

Very beautiful. Very powerful.

Just out here floating around, you jelly? Just out here floating around, you jelly? Just out here floating around, you jelly? 

Just out here floating around, you jelly? 


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 Two pals just hangin’ out. 

Two pals just hangin’ out. 


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 This Monkey Eel isn’t too excited about Friday the 13th- are you?  

This Monkey Eel isn’t too excited about Friday the 13th- are you? 


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  Nature always finds a way; even discarded items can become a home for animals.

 Nature always finds a way; even discarded items can become a home for animals.


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 Somewhere over the rainbow… Showing some love to our fresh water fish.

Somewhere over the rainbow… Showing some love to our fresh water fish.


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 Dive into March with lots of enthusiasm and a positive attitude! 

Dive into March with lots of enthusiasm and a positive attitude! 


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How do you make an octopus laugh?  You give it ten-tickles!

How do you make an octopus laugh? 

You give it ten-tickles!


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 Waddle you do without these penguin pictures?  Waddle you do without these penguin pictures?  Waddle you do without these penguin pictures? 

Waddle you do without these penguin pictures? 


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montereybayaquarium:

People always ask us: Monterey Bay Aquarium, what are YOUR favorite deep-sea animals?! After decades of waffling, we’re ready to say that *these* ten incredible creatures of the deep are our favorites—for this particular video!

From the beautiful to the bizarre, the deep sea is filled with some of earth’s most amazing and awe-inspiring creatures. To celebrate the opening of our new exhibition, “Into the Deep: Exploring Our Undiscovered Ocean"—the largest exhibition of deep-sea life in North America—we asked Aquarists Alicia, Ellen, MacKenzie, Mary, Dalton, and Tommy to share about some of their favorite critter-colleagues.

You can deep-sea them for yourself this Saturday, April 9!!

montereybayaquarium:

Thanks to astounding Aquarist Christy for the photo of a leather star crawling between sand and rock, unwittingly modeling the sea of emotion we find ourselves swimming in…

montereybayaquarium: Just your local friendly sea doggo checking in to make shore your Thursday is g

montereybayaquarium:

Just your local friendly sea doggo checking in to make shore your Thursday is going swimmingly! 

Harbor seals are always a treat to see here in Monterey Bay, and the local population is gearing up for its pupping season in just a few months—typically March through July. So if you’re planning a visit to the area around then, make sure to watch out for beach closures during this sensitive time. 

 Wonderful photo of a good good seal by local photographer Joe Platko


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This glob of mucus may not look like much, but thanks to research by @mbari-blog, we can properly identify it as a giant snot palace!


Learn about these larvacean-made, environmentally friendly mucus mansions in our newest @montereybayaquariumepisode! 

montereybayaquarium:

A minute of meditocean with our fronds

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