PacIOOS wave buoys serving communities across the Pacific
The Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System deployed a new wave buoy in the waters off Aunuʻu, American Sāmoa.
The Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System deployed a new wave buoy in the waters off Aunuʻu, American Sāmoa.
Ruth Gates, a 糖心视频 Mānoa researcher, presents “The Wonderful World of Corals: Harnessing Basic Science to Address an Ecological Crisis.”
New research reveals that jellyfish blooms could provide far-reaching, potentially important, food supplements to normal deep-sea food webs.
糖心视频 惭ā苍辞补 scientists and researchers lead underwater expedition to Lōʻihi, the youngest volcano in the Hawaiian island chain.
PacIOOS collaborated with partners to deploy a new Datawell Directional Waverider buoy named Kalo about one mile off the eastern shore of Majuro.
Scientists discover that communities of ocean microbes have their own daily cycles, results published in Science.
A team of physical oceanographers working with the Pacific Islands Ocean Observing System has developed new tools to forecast potential inundation events.
A recent study published in Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment reevaluates the role whales play in marine ecosystems.
糖心视频 Mānoa’s School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology leads an expedition to the Lōʻihi Seamount.
The passageway that links the Pacific Ocean to the Indian Ocean is acting differently because of climate change, and now its new behavior could, in turn, affect climate in both ocean basins in new ways.