John & Mary Louise Riley Bodega Marine Laboratory Seminar Series "Conservation lessons from an evolutionary saga of coastal invertebrates & climate change"
John & Mary Louise Riley Bodega Marine Laboratory Seminar Series: "Assessing the Capacity for Evolutionary Adaptation to Climate Change Stressors in Oysters and Fish"
John & Mary Louise Riley Bodega Marine Laboratory Seminar Series: "Sensitivity of populations to environmental variability and identifying climate change refugia in coastal ecosystems"
John & Mary Louise Riley Bodega Marine Laboratory Seminar Series: "Climate change in the coastal zone: social and ecological interactions at the land-ocean interface"
Stressful childhoods can affect an individual’s adult years and influence future generations. Scientists at the University of California, Davis, found a similar pattern holds true for red abalone exposed as babies, and again as adults, to the stress of ocean acidification.
White abalone shells are magnificent structures. Translucent during the marine snail’s juvenile days, the extremely durable shell increases in opacity as the organism ages, gaining its paint-splatter-esque red, brown and white coloring from the algae it eats.