Visiting researchers build on decades of plankton and sediment studies and easy access at ASU BIOS
Ocean Bacteria Work the Night Shift
January 15, 2026
New study finds nighttime peaks in bacterial activity and carbon cycling in the ocean
From online learning to ocean exploration: going to Bermuda
December 02, 2025
ASU’s online students can step beyond the screen with optional hands-on experience at BIOS
A Community of BATS: The Collaborative Engine Behind the Bermuda Atlantic Time-series Study
January 27, 2026
Built on decades of partnership, BATS continues to advance understanding of ocean change
Representatives from ASU BIOS Travel to NASA
June 17, 2025
Field researchers share insights at annual PACE meeting, strengthening global efforts to monitor ocean health and climate change
How our One Button Studio is Advancing Online Learning
January 29, 2025
Online learning platforms are connecting students from around the world
Exploring New Depths: How a Mesopelagic Profiler is Redefining Ocean Exploration
November 25, 2024
Collaborative efforts send profiler to work in the mesopelagic zones of the Atlantic Ocean
Plankton in Our Midst: The Unseen Citizens of the Sea and Our Breathing Planet
November 21, 2024
The exhibit explores the exquisite beauty of plankton and its crucial role not only in ocean ecosystems, but in how ocean health is critical to our survival and elemental to all life on our planet.
Ground Truthing for NASA – ASU BIOS Selected to Validate Satellite Measurements of Plankton and Ocean Illuminance
February 29, 2024
Typically associated with the study of Earth’s upper atmosphere and beyond, satellites deployed by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) also augment our understanding of Earth’s ecosystems, including critical information about the ocean such as locations of algal blooms and levels of marine photosynthesis.
Side-swimming plankton snail flaps shell like a fin
December 10, 2018
Amy Maas, Ferhat Karakas and David Murphy never know what they’re going to turn up when they go trawling for zooplankton. ‘We work on the swimming of various sea butterfly species’, says Murphy, adding that unlike true butterflies, sea butterflies are miniscule snails that live at depth and swim to the surface at night, propelled by minute wings like flying insects. But one day in September 2017, the trio was in for a surprise. In addition to their usual haul of sea butterflies, Karakas and Maas turned up a pair of tiny heteropod snails, Atlanta selvagensis. ‘I had never heard of heteropods before’, admits Murphy. As virtually nothing was known about these rare aquatic molluscs, the trio rushed them back to Murphy’s high-tech zooplankton movie set in the lab, in the hope of catching them in the act of swimming.