FSUCML in the News

Reserachers 'ready to respond" as FL Keys marks 1 year since start of spinning fish phenomenon


t’s a somber anniversary in the Florida Keys. This time last year, residents and tourists began witnessing the bizarre behavior of fish spinning disoriented and acting distressed. The phenomenon impacted more than 80 species of fish and rays and stunned onlookers and social media users. But it was the critically endangered smalltooth sawfish that suffered the biggest loss. At least 54 were reported dead by Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission from Key West, north to the Saint Lucie River, to even as far as Tampa Bay.

Alumni Spotlight: Bryan Keller


Bryan Keller graduated from Florida State University in 2020 with a doctorate in biological oceanography through the Department of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Science, part of the College of Arts and Sciences. While at FSU, Keller was selected for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Sea Grant Knauss Fellowship, which matches highly qualified graduate students with hosts in the legislative and executive branches of government in Washington, D.C. and allows fellows to gain experience in fields such as marine resource management. The fellowship led to Keller’s current role as a foreign affairs specialist for NOAA, traveling the world to represent the U.S. and negotiate on issues related to fisheries management on the high seas.

In search of bull sharks, where manatees roam


Crystal River is famous for its manatees, when hundreds flock snout to snout in the warm waters of Three Sisters Spring during winter cold snaps. But there's also a key species hiding in its waters that most people never heard of. We go on a trip to Crystal River, where two FSU scientists, Alyssa Andres and Harrison Clark, are researching bull sharks.

Rare sawfish trying to make a comeback off Florida, Georgia


Bringing back the sawfish Florida adopted protections in 1992 and the U.S. population of sawfish was the nation’s first native marine fish listed under the Endangered Species Act in 2003. By that time, the fish were only found in pockets of Southwest Florida, said Dean Grubbs, associate director of research and a research professor at Florida State University’s Coastal and Marine Laboratory.

Hope, then heartbreak, as first ‘spinning’ sawfish dies in Tampa Bay


“It’s distressing to see the animals dead and dying,” said Dean Grubbs, the associate director of research at Florida State University’s Coastal and Marine Laboratory. Grubbs is also a member of the sawfish recovery team and was on the boat last week when the crew caught the healthy sawfish.

Ph.D. student Annais Muschett-Bonilla awarded inaugural Guy Harvey Fellowship


In a dedicated effort to protect coastal and marine habitats and species, the Guy Harvey Foundation (GHF) has awarded a Florida State University student the inaugural Guy Harvey Fellowship. Annais Muschett-Bonilla, a doctoral student in the College of Arts and Sciences, received a $5,000 research stipend and certificate personally designed and signed by Guy Harvey, world-renowned marine wildlife artist, conservationist and GHF Founder/Chair Emeritus.