How Does Creativity Fit into Science Communication
Natalie Sopinka | AFS Contributing Writer; E-mail: [email protected] This article was originally published on the Canadian Science Publishing blog as part of the series “Making
American Fisheries Society Family of Websites:
Read our five journals and Fisheries magazine
Find thousands of unpublished agency reports and other information
Join us in Honolulu in 2024
Find an AFS Unit near you or in your area of specialty
Learn how to communicate the effects of climate change on fisheries
Summer internships for high school students
Explore our initiatives to increase diversity in the Society and in the fisheries profession
Find fisheries science products and services
Quick answers to common questions
Natalie Sopinka | AFS Contributing Writer; E-mail: [email protected] This article was originally published on the Canadian Science Publishing blog as part of the series “Making
Christine M. Moffitt | U.S. Geological Survey, Idaho Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, University of Idaho, Moscow ID, 83844-1141. E-mail: [email protected] The economic and
I was one of perhaps 25 AFS members who attended the 23rd biennial Coastal and Estuarine Research Federation (CERF) meeting in November 2015. The general
We all have our stories as to how we got on a path to this profession. I’m sure that many members like me first got
The AFS Governing Board has approved two issues as changes to the Society Constitution and Rules. These are being posted for a 30-day review and comment
Bye bye back plates: sea slug autotomy EPA approves lamprey “pheromone biopesticide” How do you ship a blue whale heart across the Atlantic? “Seaweed Economics
By Jeff Schaeffer It is with mixed emotions that this month we bid farewell to Sarah Gilbert Fox, our long-standing managing editor at Fisheries. Fox is leaving
Killer whales face the prospect of extinction in areas near industrialized parts of Europe where banned chemicals are leaching into the water. A study by
Emily Yehle, E&E reporter Published: Wednesday, January 20, 2016 Last year was the world’s warmest year ever recorded, beating out 2014 in average temperatures over
Gayathri Vaidyanathan, E&E reporter Published: Wednesday, January 20, 2016 The global oceans, like a giant sponge, have sopped up 90 percent of the excess heat