23 January 2014

Layton Garden Club Adopts US 1 for a day

 The  Layton Garden Club members organized a road-side cleanup event in the City of Layton January 4th. Effort was concentrated along US #1 for a mile on either side of the city, including some side roads.

Fortified (or lured) by coffee and donuts provided by the Layton Garden club, 45 residents from Layton, Conch Key, Marathon and Key Largo spent the morning scouring the roadsides for trash. KML staff also lent a hand in the cleanup.The Monroe County Sheriff's Office pitched in, providing patrol cars with flashing lights to alert passing motorists, while officers rolled up their sleeves and gathered debris.   3320 lbs of trash was hauled away by the MCSO truck! But not before refueling with hotdogs and hamburgers hot off the grill. This may become an annual event!

Find our more information see City of Layton website


03 January 2014

Winter Science Seminars

Winter Science Seminars at KML
Wed. Jan 8th 6:30-7:30pm
KML Classroom
Approaches for conserving and restoring the Florida Keys Queen Conch population” - Presented by: FWC/FWRI Research Associate and scientist: Bob Glazer
Learn why the sex lives of conch are so important to their long-term sustainable conservation in Florida and throughout the Caribbean. 

Up-coming seminars:
Feb 12 - Climate Change and the Florida Keys
March 12 – 2010 Keys Freeze Cold Water Event

Seating may be limited:
Please call during business hours to sign up
664-9101

Also coming Layton Days Celebration and

KML Open House – Saturday March 1st  

24 August 2013

Elkhorn Coral Spawning at Turtle Rocks

Spawning! Gamete bundles rise from an Elkhorn Coral colony - 10:50pm 3 nites after full moon (photo K Neeley)
 KML staff divers had the opportunity to assist FWC/FWRI coral biologists with the Acropora spawning project at Turtle Rocks (Upper Keys). Scientists from 7 agencies combined forces to monitor various sites in the Upper Keys to witness the annual event and collect samples.

Divers head to the reef to monitor for spawning
Diver Bill Ferrell rigging a marker buoy at sunset
Elkhorn Coral colonies (Acopora palmata)
Staghorn Coral (Acropora cervicornis) provides a sheltered bed for a juvenile parrotfish (photo C Lewis)
Moonjellies dancing in the moon beams

17 August 2013

Scientists measure oxygen consumption in coral sands


Diver checking on "tripod" of eddy correlation instruments at their monitoring site 
 Dr. Markus Huettel, from Florida State University, returned to KML in August 2013 with his colleague, Dr. Peter Berg from the University of Virginia and a team of divers to once again carefully deploy an array of equipment on the ocean floor. They are investigating the role of light, currents and dissolved organic matter on oxygen consumption of coral sands and carbonate mud. (permit: FKNMS-2012-137)

Despite several days of rough seas, the team returned to their site each day over a 10-day period to download data and re-deploy equipment.

06 August 2013

Wallops Island Marine Consortium Class Explores the Keys

Once again, Dr. Sean Cornell, professor at Shippensberg College (Shippensberg, PA) traveled to the Florida Keys with the Marine Science Consortium class, (Wallops Island, VA).
Students gathered data at one of the KML Living Laboratory Near-shore Benthic Monitoring sites

photos by T Bartlett
Exploring the rocky inter-tidal/hard-bottom habitat along the south shore of Indian Key State Park

Thirteen students from 7 universities enthusiastically participated in comprehensive comparisons of the coastal ecosystems between Wallops Island and the Keys.

29 July 2013

Shark research continues at KML


Capturing Bonnethead and juvenile Lemon and Nurse sharks temporarily held in the KML Mesocosym for transport
Christine Bedore, Duke University (Durham, NC), used KML as home port while collecting lemon sharks for her PhD research. She is studying "Shark predation on cryptic prey" & "Oxygen demands of sharks during swimming". Assisted by Jack Morris and her colleagues from Mote Marine Lab, they captured juvenile sharks and held them in the KML's 120,000-gal Mesocosym for later transport.


19 July 2013

KML welcomes new Staff Biologist



 Tom Bartlett joined the KML team as our new staff biologist in July 2013. He received his Bachelors of Science degree in Biology from the University of North Florida, Jacksonville. Tom served as research assistant to Dr. Joe Butler studying populations of Diamondback terrapins (Malaclemys terrapin) in the Florida Big Bend region, and with Dr. Cliff Ross studying the physiological effect of environmental stressors on coral larvae (Porites astreoides) in the Florida Keys. He then managed the Research Laboratory for the UNF Biology Department. Tom's cave diving, fishing and boating experience will make him a welcomed member of the KML team.

Florida Aquarium "Teacher workshop on coral reef ecosystems"


Fifteen teachers, grades 8-12, experienced a week of "total immersion" in the various ecosystems of the Florida Keys. Heather Judkins, Teacher Programs Coordinator for The Florida Aquarium (Tampa, FL), offered a workshop on "Chemical Processes Associated with Coral Reef Ecosystems" in July 2013. 
Learning water sampling techniques at a Florida Bay site
 After each snorkel, everyone gathered around Heather to summarize their experiences.

Heading back to KML after a day of snorkeling
 They all left with exhausted smiles and a greater appreciation of The Keys. This was Heather's first KML experience and she promises to return.

22 June 2013

Summer Solstice Ocean Sampling Day


NOAA scientist, Christopher Sinigalliano, sampled water at Tennessee Reef as a part of the
Earth Biome Project: Ocean Sampling Day.

Bacterial community genetic profiling on water samples collected  will provide a  snapshot of global microbial biodiversity & community structure around the world.

Intern/volunteers assisting with collecting water samples

























13 June 2013

Summer course: FIO Study Abroad in Florida

KML has been the venue for Week 4 of the first-time ever, FIO Study Abroad in Florida: Field Studies in Marine Science. The students began their adventures May 28th  at the University of North Florida. The next week they relocated to the University of South Florida – St. Petersburg, then on to Florida Gulf Coast University. 
 Florida Atlantic University is hosting the week spent at KML, where students will explore the marine habitats of the Keys.
Day 1 at KML: Students were eager to board the R/V Diodon for their trip to the reef habitats
The class snorkeled 3 different reef sites in the Middle Keys

Recapping with their professors and discussing what they observed after a snorkel
Day 2 at KML: the students explored Florida Bay habitats, such as these mangrove islands in the Florida Everglades National Park
Assessing a seagrass bed site near a mangrove island
Macroalgae lab with Dr. Dennis Hanisak from Florida Atlantic University






Day 3 on the water: a visit to an artificial reef habitat - the Long Key Bridge Rubble

























Back in the classroom at KML, Dr Josh Voss discusses final exam questions with the class

Students will return to the University of North Florida for the final wrap-up week.
 You can meet the students and follow their adventures on their class blog: http://fiofieldstudies2013.blogspot.com/.