Aquarium Audio
Hear Our Latest Aquacasts
Ruth Gates
The Wonderful World of Corals: Harnessing Basic Science to Address an Ecological Crisis
Ruth Gates recorded this Aquacast at the Aquarium on September 19, 2017. Dr. Gates is the director of and a researcher at the Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology, University of Hawaii at Manoa.
Michael Prather
Reporting from the Front Line: Where Science Meets Government
Michael Prather recorded this Aquacast at the Aquarium on September 7, 2017. Prather is a University of California, Irvine, distinguished professor of Earth system science.
Alex Hall
Climate Change, the Sierra Nevada, and Our Water Future
Alex Hall recorded this Aquacast at the Aquarium on June 22, 2017. Dr. Hall is a professor in the Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences and Institute of the Environment and Sustainability and director of the Center for Climate Science at UCLA.
Andrew Pershing
Climate Change and Ecosystems of the Gulf of Maine: What Does the Future Hold?
Andrew Pershing recorded this Aquacast at the Aquarium on March 15, 2017. Pershing is chief scientific officer at the Gulf of Maine Research Institute and runs the Ecosystem Modeling Lab.
Malcolm Bowman
Can We Continue to Live at the Edge of the Sea?
Malcolm Bowman recorded this Aquacast at the Aquarium on January 26, 2017. Bowman is an oceanographer, engineer, and professor of oceanography at State University of New York, Stony Brook.
Rob Gould
Adventures in Social Marketing: Appealing to the Better Angels of our Nature
Rob Gould recorded this Aquacast at the Aquarium on November 17, 2016. Gould is the founder and president/CEO of One Degree Strategies.
Malin Pinsky
Does Climate Change Put Ocean Life in a Blender?
Malin Pinsky recorded this Aquacast at the Aquarium on June 7, 2016. Pinsky is a Sloan Research Fellow in Ocean Sciences and an assistant professor of ecology and evolution at Rutgers University.
Stephen Weisberg
The West Coast Ocean Acidification and Hypoxia Science Panel: Findings, Recommendations, and Actions
Dr. Stephen Weisberg recorded this Aquacast at the Aquarium on May 24, 2016. Dr. Weisberg is executive director of the Southern California Coastal Water Research Project Authority.
Jason Keller
Exploring Blue Carbon in Southern California Salt Marshes
Jason Keller recorded this Aquacast at the Aquarium on April 21, 2016. Keller is an associate professor of life and environmental sciences in Chapman University’s Schmid College of Science and Technology.
Marine Mass Extinctions: Animal Loss in the Global Oceans
Coastal Conversations
In this episode of Coastal Conversations, Aquarium President and CEO Jerry Schubel talks with Dr. Douglas McCauley, a biologist with expertise in extinctions on land and in the ocean.
Coastal Resiliency in New York and New Jersey After Sandy
Coastal Conversations
In this episode of Coastal Conversations, Aquarium President and CEO Jerry Schubel talks with Dr. Alan Blumberg, who has been working on coastal resiliency in New York and New Jersey with efforts to prepare for extreme weather, like Hurricane Sandy in 2012.
Greg Stone
Trouble and Hope in an Ocean Paradise
Greg Stone recorded this Aquacast at the Aquarium on August 20, 2015. He is the executive vice president for Conservation International.
Alan Blumberg
Resilience of Coastal Cities to Environmental Threats: The New Frontier
Alan Blumberg recorded this Aquacast at the Aquarium on July 21, 2015. Blumberg is the George Meade Bond Professor of Ocean Engineering and director of the Davidson Laboratory at Stevens Institute of Technology.
Donald Prothero
The Sixth Extinction of the Ocean
Donald Prothero recorded this Aquacast at the Aquarium on July 9, 2015. Prothero is a professor in the department of geological sciences at California Polytechnic University, Pomona, and a research associate in vertebrate paleontology at the Los Angeles County Natural History Museum.
Reinhard Flick
California King Tides and Sea Level Rise
Reinhard Flick recorded this Aquacast at the Aquarium on July 1, 2015. Flick is a scientist at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography.