![]() Grosberg as the Mote Scholar in Marineīiology for 2017-2018. Hay led a Research Working Group on Ecological Functions andĮcosystem Services in Novel Caribbean Coral Reef Systems in May 2018.įlorida State University is pleased to present Dr. Hay is identified by ISI’s Web-of-Sciences as one of the world’s mostĬited researchers in the broad area of Ecology and the Environment.Īs the FSU Mote Scholar in Marine Biology, Dr. ![]() He has conducted more than 5,000 scuba dives, and has ![]() He has participated in dozens of ship-based expeditions but more commonly worksĪt remote field stations to conduct longer-term experiments, most recently in Fiji and French Polynesia, and hasĪlso worked extensively in the Caribbean and Florida Keys. His fundamental research has provided key insights on critical aspects of the conservation and restoration ofĬoral reefs and challenged how scientists view ecological and evolutionary processes affecting the establishmentĪnd impact of invasive species. Hay is a marineĮcologist known for his work on community ecology and for helping to found the field of marine chemical ecology. Hay is the Teasley Professor of Environmental Biology, a Regents’ Professor, and founder andĬo-director of the Center for Aquatic Chemical Ecology at Georgia Institute of Technology. Hay as the Mote Eminent Scholar in Marine Biology forĢ018-2019. Fuiman is leading research at Mote Marine Laboratory in Sarasota, Florida, on the influence of marine finfish nutrition on egg and larval quality.įlorida State University is pleased to present Dr. He has received several awards, including the Antarctica Service Medal of the United States of America from the National Science Foundation, the Conservation and Environmental Stewardship Award from the Coastal Bend Bays Foundation, and the Teaching Excellence Award from the University of Texas College of Natural Sciences.Īs the FSU Mote Scholar in Fisheries Ecology, Dr. He is the originator and Executive Producer of the national radio program/podcast Science and the Sea. Fuiman has served as an editor of Advances in Marine Biology and on the editorial board for the Royal Society journal Biology Letters and other prominent journals. He has 145 scientific publications to his credit, including the first textbook on the importance of larval fishes to fisheries science.ĭr. ![]() He has also conducted research on marine mammals, deep-sea clams, shorebirds, octopus, and marine food-web dynamics. These interests are at the interface between aquaculture and stock-enhancement. Fuiman is an authority on the biology and ecology of larval fishes, with a special interest in how developmental processes affect mortality of larvae and how external factors, such as the physical/chemical environment and maternal contribution of nutrition, affect fish larvae and recruitment. He has worked at the University of Texas Marine Science Institute since 1988, and served as its Director for seven years.ĭr. He was awarded a National Science Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship in Environmental Biology, which supported two years of research at the Scottish Marine Biological Association laboratory in Oban, Scotland. He received his bachelor’s degree from Southampton College, his master’s from Cornell University, and his Ph,D. He is also Professor in the Department of Marine Science at The University of Texas at Austin and holder of the Perry R. Fuiman is the Director of the Fisheries and Mariculture Laboratory at the University of Texas Marine Science Institute. Fuiman as the Mote Eminent Scholar in Fisheries Ecology at Mote Marine Laboratory for 2018-2019. The University of Texas at Austin, Department of Marine Scienceįlorida State University is pleased to present Dr. ![]()
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