UD scientists are making trips to the Antarctic and Arctic to study the freezing waters tiniest inhabitants: marine microbes.
Beachcombing — walking along the beach to see what treasures have washed ashore — is fun to do on a summer day. But try it this winter and you'll learn what the best beachcombers know: The seasons strong storms and lack of crowds leave behind the most amazing finds!
Chock full of protein and vitamins, and low in total fat, seafood is good for you! Consider some new ways to serve up seafood — try award-winning recipes from the 2008 Coast Day Crab Cake Cook-Off and the Great Seafood Chowder Challenge!
If you live near water, you may have heard the term harmful algal bloom. HABs, as they're called, are caused by a small group of micro-organisms that grow rapidly under certain environmental conditions.
Delaware Sea Grant researchers are studying how the ocean interacts with the air moving above it. This information will help experts estimate the intensity of a hurricane when it hits land — and as a result save lives.
Congratulations to William Geppert, the 2008 Governors Marine and Aquatic Science Teacher of the Year. Geppert, who teaches 11th and 12th graders at Cape Henlopen High School in Lewes, was chosen based on four major criteria: creativity, innovation, quality of teaching, and impact on students.
Discover the many ways that the ocean touches your life at the 32nd annual Coast Day! UD's celebration of the sea will take place Sunday, October 5th, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., at the Hugh R. Sharp Campus in Lewes.
The price of gasoline might affect this year's summer road trip, but a new technology could change that for the future. University researchers have created a system that enables vehicles to not only run on electricity, but also to store and provide electricity for utilities.
University of Delaware researchers are studying how changes in environmental conditions and climate influence movement of fish larvae from open ocean waters into Delaware Bay.
Swimmer's itch can really take the fun out of a summer vacation. Also known as clam digger's itch, the uncomfortable rash is an allergic reaction to a tiny free-swimming parasite sometimes found naturally in shallow coastal waters.
Those flashes you see moving across the beach aren't phantoms — they are fleet-footed animals called ghost crabs. These sand-colored crabs leave their beach dens along the Delaware coast between dusk and dawn to scurry down to the water.
With rising energy prices and concerns about the impacts that fossil fuels have, alternative energy sources are getting a close look these days. One of these alternatives is wind power. The University of Delaware is studying whether coastal winds might be harnessed to supply the energy needs of its Hugh R. Sharp Campus in Lewes.
Want to learn how scientists are addressing ocean issues in environments all around the world, from the icy seas of the Antarctic to the mid-Atlantic coast? The University of Delaware College of Earth, Ocean, and Environment offers free guided tours of its world-class research complex in Lewes.
Delaware is a vital rest stop for weary shorebirds as they trek from South America to Canadian breeding grounds each spring. Flocks of tourists also come to witness the annual event, and university researchers are studying their economic impact.
Seafood lovers, here's your chance to shine! Enter your favorite crab cake recipe in one of the region's most popular cooking contests — the University of Delaware's Crab Cake Cook-Off. All recipes are due Friday, August 15th.
In the spring, thousands of horseshoe crabs come to Delaware Bay beaches to spawn. To help people learn more about the crabs, Delaware Sea Grant has introduced a new full-color, three-dimensional model of the animal, which children or adults can assemble in approximately 15 minutes.
You don't have to rearrange your life or spend a lot of money to help the environment. This year for Earth Day, held April 22, consider easy things you can do to protect the coast.
Landscaping can be a formidable task along Delaware’s shore, where salt spray, wind, heat and sandy soils are prevalent. Coastal areas provide an excellent opportunity to use native plants in perennial gardens.
Sand dunes are mounds or ridges of windblown sand that are vital to shoreline stability. Dunes protect the Delaware coast during storms, provide a reservoir of sand for the beach and sustain a unique ecosystem.
