Radio Program

Our regular Science and the SeaTM radio program presents marine science topics in an engaging two-minute story format. Our script writers gather ideas for the radio program from the University of Texas Marine Science Institute's researchers and from our very popular college class, Introduction to Oceanography, which we teach to hundreds of non-science majors at The University of Texas at Austin every year. Our radio programs are distributed at to commercial and public radio stations across the country.

August 8, 2009

If there’s one thing the fish known as Macropinna microstoma doesn’t have to worry about, it’s being hit in the head by a falling brick. Its tube-shaped eyes typically look straight up -- through the transparent top of its own head. But it can also rotate its eyes so they look forward -- through organs that are the equivalent of nostrils.

Macropinna is found along the rim of the northern Pacific Ocean, from Japan to the Bering Sea to Baja California.

August 2, 2009

Cape Hatteras. Hilton Head. Miami Beach. Galveston. South Padre.

Not only are these some of the most popular tourist destinations in the country, they’re some of the most fragile, too. Their contours are constantly reshaped by wind and waves and storms -- the fate of all barrier islands.

These islands are long, narrow strips of sand that run parallel to the coastline. They’re found along all the world’s coastlines. But they’re most prominent on the Atlantic and Gulf coasts of the United States.

July 26, 2009

Just because something is beautiful doesn’t mean it can’t be tough. Consider mother of pearl -- the irridescent coating on the insides of the shells of some oysters, abalone, and other creatures. Its colorful appearance belies the fact that it’s extremely tough -- about 3,000 times stronger than its individual pieces. Scientists and engineers hope to emulate that toughness in designs for everything from body armor to artificial bones.

July 20, 2009

If you ever want to drop a boat in the water and let the currents carry you around the world, there’s only one place to go: Antarctica. A wide, deep current circles the entire continent. It’s the only current that will carry you all the way around the globe.

The Antarctic Circumpolar Current was discovered more than three centuries ago by Edmond Halley, for whom Halley’s Comet is named. But scientists didn’t begin to study the current until the last half of the 20th century.

July 13, 2009

In aquariums and water shows, the Orca looks cute and cuddly. Its streamlined shape, black-and-white coloring, and strong leaps make it a popular performer. But in the wild, it earns its nickname: killer whale. It hunts in packs, and eats just about anything that swims or floats. And it doesn’t matter how big the prey is -- Orcas will attack whales that are many times their own size.

July 5, 2009

A volcanic mountain is building off the coast of Oregon. It sits atop a “hotspot” -- a bubble of hot rock far beneath the ocean floor. The lava pushes through the plate of rock that forms the Pacific basin, and piles up to form a mountain.

It’s a process that’s played out many times over the last 40 million years or so. It’s built up an entire chain of submerged mountains, known as seamounts. They stretch hundreds of miles to the northwest, far into the Gulf of Alaska. Some of them rise up to two miles high, and come to within a few hundred feet of the surface.

June 28, 2009

From its name to its feeding habits, the hagfish is one of the least appealing creatures in the sea.

Its long, thin body looks like a fat worm -- and early researchers even classified it as a worm. It burrows into the ooze at the bottom of the ocean, usually waiting for a dead or dying animal to fall from above. And when one does, it burrows into the creature and eats it from the inside out.

June 21, 2009

A summertime ritual for many teenagers is gassing up the lawnmower and going door to door in search of lawn-mowing jobs. But cutting the grass can be a problem for people who live along bays and estuaries. It can damage beds of seagrass, which provide food and shelter for fish, shellfish, and birds.

An example is in the Barnegat Bay-Little Egg Harbor Estuary in New Jersey. It’s a narrow, shallow body that runs about 40 miles along the coastline.

June 14, 2009

The bottom of the sea is often described as “otherworldly.” It’s so different from what we see on land -- and so difficult to reach -- that it might as well be the surface of another planet.

But a pool of lava on the side of an undersea volcano takes the “otherworldly” business to a new level. It’s more like the volcanoes on one of the moons of Jupiter than those on Earth.

June 7, 2009

The male fiddler crab may be a show-off, but he’s also a gentlemen. He gives his burrow to his mate, and he never picks on a female.

Fiddlers are only an inch or two long. But they pack in close together, with thousands of them sharing the same territory in a mangrove forest or on a sandbar or mudflat. Each crab builds a burrow to protect itself against predators, and to provide a den for mating and incubating its eggs.

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