Long Marine Laboratory

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The Long Marine laboratory is a research center located at the West edge of Santa Cruz, CA. It is affiliated with the University of California, Santa Cruz and is a field base for researchers of the Monterey Bay. sciences Long Marine lab focuses primarily on marine sciences, and is the oceanside research center for UCSC's Institute of Marine Sciences (IMS). Facilities at the lab include: The Center for Ocean Health, The Marine Wildlife Veterinary Care and Research Center, The National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), The Seabird/Raptor facility for the UCSC Predatory Bird Research Group, two large outdoor tanks for for small marine mammals, four smaller pools with haulout areas for seals and sea lions, a three tank dolphinarium (acoustically engineered for the dolphin's sonar capabilities), and the Seymour Marine Discovery Center.

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[edit] History

The Monterey Bay presents an ideal place to study marine life. The development of an onshore marine laboratory had a high priority since the UCSC campus opened in 1965. The generous gift of land in 1972 by Mrs. Marion Stowell Younger and her late husband, Donald, made possible the development of the marine laboratory at the west edge of the city of Santa Cruz, less than a ten minute drive from the UCSC campus. This magnificent 40 acre site contains a relatively undisturbed wetlands, the Younger Lagoon, and flat terraces for the marine lab buildings. Long Marine Lab opened in late 1978, and supports the marine research of the santa Cruz faculty and students and is essential to the development of marine program of international recognition, which UCSC now has.

[edit] The Seymour Marine Discovery Center at Long Marine Laboratory

The Seymour center is the public outreach and education center located at Long Marine Lab. The building of the center was made possible by H. Boyd Seymour Jr. It opened March 11th, 2007 and receives more than 55,000 public visitors each year, including 10,000 K-12 students.

[edit] Exhibits

The Seymour Marine lab has four different exhibits: looking, testing, puzzling, questioning. These try to show the visitors what scientists do, and how they go about their research

The Looking Exhibit: This exhibit “offers thematic interactive experiences and adventures in a wide variety of scientific fields for visitors of all ages, and in nine different languages.” [1] These displays try to give the viewers a “hands-on” experience, and try to show how a scientist does his or her research out in the field. There are three different parts to this exhibit:

  1. Elephant Seals field studies
  2. Coastal Geographical Processes
  3. Tidepool Ecology: Long-term Observations
  4. Two mermaids one male one female(may be seen making little mermaid from 5-6)

The Testing Exhibit: At this exhibit there are three displays and instruments used by scientists to collect data and samples for a variety of things: investigating life on Earth, they are used in the depths of the oceans, with marine mammals in water and air, and to sample the environmental toxins that accumulate everywhere. The three displays are:

  1. Ocean Drilling Project (ODP)
  2. Pinniped Sensory Abilities
  3. Heavy Metals in the Environment

The Puzzling Exhibit:

  1. Marine Snow Studies
  2. Otter and Killer Whale Interactions

The Questioning Exhibit: The questioning aspect of the center is incorporated with the aquarium. On each tank, which houses an animal, there is a question relating to that animal which the scientists have to ask themselves. Some examples of these questions are: “How smart is an octopus? What does this crab do when it outgrows its shell? What survival techniques do sanddabs use to escape hungry predators?”

[edit] The Aquarium

The animals in the aquarium are all found in Monterey bay, and give visitors a chance to get an up close look at the local biology of the area.

[edit] The Blue whale skeleton

Ms. Blue, is the largest Blue whale skeleton displayed in the world. She washed ashore at Fiddlers Cove near Pescadero on September 6, 1979. Biologists and students from UC Santa Cruz began fleshing the whale, the whole process took about a month to complete. After being transported to UC Santa Cruz the carcass was buried near the college. In the summer of 1985, the bones were unearthed and reconstruction began. Frank Perry was hired to mount the cleaned bones for display. He and a group of specialists successfully constructed a steel framework to support the bones and recreate the proper arch of the spine and completed it in 1986. In 1999 the skeleton was finally moved to its final resting place at the Long Marine Laboratory. Once a year she is painted with 'bone white' house paint for preservation. The Whale is 18 feet tall and 87 feet long. She was not fully grown when she died.

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[edit] Desalination Plant

Due to the drought in Santa Cruz in the late 1970s the Soquel Creek Water District has agreed to split the bill with the city of Santa Cruz on a desalination plant. The city has not added to its water supply since that drought so the desalination plant would alleviate the threat of another drought. “Currently, work is being done to build a $4 million test desalination facility at the city's Long Marine Lab.” [2]

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