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Faces of Sea Turtle Conservation: Dr. Larisa Avens, Research Biologist

A new technique developed by three NOAA Fisheries scientists is giving us more insight than ever before on sea turtle populations, extracting life history and other information from sea turtle bones. The technology combines bone dating, or “skeletochronology,” and the sequential sampling of annual growth rings in sea turtle bones to identify chemical signatures including stable carbon and nitrogen isotope ratios. Meet the scientists behind this new technology and how it is helping guide the way we protect and conserve sea turtles.
June 06, 2018 - Feature Story ,
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Faces of Sea Turtle Conservation: Jeff Seminoff, Marine Ecologist

A new technique developed by three NOAA Fisheries scientists is giving us more insight than ever before on sea turtle populations, extracting life history and other information from sea turtle bones. The technology combines bone dating, or “skeletochronology,” and the sequential sampling of annual growth rings in sea turtle bones to identify chemical signatures including stable carbon and nitrogen isotope ratios. Meet the scientists behind this new technology and how it is helping guide the way we protect and conserve sea turtles.
June 06, 2018 - Feature Story ,
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Faces of Sea Turtle Conservation: The Bone Collectors

A new technique developed by three NOAA Fisheries scientists is giving us more insight on sea turtle populations than ever before.
June 05, 2018 - Feature Story ,
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NOAA in the Field

NOAA Fisheries staff aboard Army Corps of Engineers dredge, MURDEN
May 31, 2018 - Feature Story ,
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Searching for Sawfish

Tagging smalltooth sawfish in Florida
May 29, 2018 - Feature Story ,
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Sea Turtles Return Home

NOAA Galveston sea turtle release
May 29, 2018 - Feature Story ,
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Faces of Right Whale Conservation: Barb Zoodsma, Recovery Program Coordinator

North Atlantic right whales are in crisis and will go extinct if the current population decline is not reversed. Learn how NOAA Fisheries and partners are coordinating closely to solve this urgent conservation challenge in this Q&A.
May 08, 2018 - Feature Story ,
right-whale-mother-calf.jpg Last year NOAA and its partners only detected four North Atlantic right whale mother/calf pairs in the calving grounds. This year, none were seen. Credit: NOAA Fisheries. Photo taken under a NOAA scientific permit.

Restoring the Gulf of Mexico, Two Years after Historic Deepwater Horizon Settlement

In 2017 NOAA and the other Trustees continue to make significant progress toward restoring the Gulf of Mexico from Deepwater Horizon, which poured oil into the water and onto the coastline for almost three months in 2010.
April 24, 2018 - Feature Story ,

U.S. Secretary of Commerce Applauds Pilot Program to Allow States to Manage Recreational Red Snapper Fishing in the Gulf of Mexico

New two-year pilot program grants partial management responsibility of the Gulf of Mexico red snapper fishery to the five Gulf states. 
April 17, 2018 - Leadership Message ,
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Right Whale Conservation: Get the Facts from Our Ship Strike Experts

North Atlantic right whales are approaching extinction, and vessel strikes, also known as ship strikes, are a leading cause of their declining population. Explore the strategies and challenges of reducing these dangerous collisions in this Q&A.
March 19, 2018 - Feature Story ,
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