Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Denny, Mark
Format: Artículo científico
Language:en
Published: The Journal of experimental biology 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41627203/
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1868266092650037248
author Denny, Mark
author_facet Denny, Mark
Denny, Mark
collection PubMed - marine biology
contents Stanford's Hopkins Marine Station: insights into the purpose, promise and peril of field stations. Denny, Mark Marine Biology California Universities History, 20th Century Animals History, 21st Century Hopkins Marine Station, Stanford University's marine science center, exemplifies five attributes that could be said to characterize field stations in general: history, location, isolation, focus and fragility. Founded in 1892, the Marine Station has a long history of notable research on subjects ranging from the biochemistry of photosynthesis to developmental biology, intertidal ecology and comparative physiology. Five Nobel laureates have been influenced by classes they attended at Hopkins, and the nearly 700 undergraduate research projects conducted at the Marine Station have sparked seminal studies on subjects as disparate as marine pollution and climate change. Current research spans topics from environmental DNA to the conservation of fisheries and the biomechanics of foraging whales. The Marine Station's scientific and educational goals are facilitated by its location on the edge of Monterey Bay and its isolation from the university's main campus, which combine to encourage a sense of intellectual community and a productive focus on the marine environment and its inhabitants. However, Hopkins' location and isolation do pose their own risks. As with most field stations, isolation from the main campus has at times made the Marine Station vulnerable to closure when money was tight, and owing to its proximity to the shore, sea-level rise poses an existential threat. In these times of rapid environmental and societal change, it is important to recognize both the value and the fragility of field institutions such as Hopkins Marine Station.
format Artículo científico
id pubmed_41627203
institution PubMed
language en
publishDate 2026
publisher The Journal of experimental biology
record_format pubmed
spellingShingle Stanford's Hopkins Marine Station: insights into the purpose, promise and peril of field stations.
Denny, Mark
Marine Biology
California
Universities
History, 20th Century
Animals
History, 21st Century
Stanford's Hopkins Marine Station: insights into the purpose, promise and peril of field stations. Denny, Mark Marine Biology California Universities History, 20th Century Animals History, 21st Century Hopkins Marine Station, Stanford University's marine science center, exemplifies five attributes that could be said to characterize field stations in general: history, location, isolation, focus and fragility. Founded in 1892, the Marine Station has a long history of notable research on subjects ranging from the biochemistry of photosynthesis to developmental biology, intertidal ecology and comparative physiology. Five Nobel laureates have been influenced by classes they attended at Hopkins, and the nearly 700 undergraduate research projects conducted at the Marine Station have sparked seminal studies on subjects as disparate as marine pollution and climate change. Current research spans topics from environmental DNA to the conservation of fisheries and the biomechanics of foraging whales. The Marine Station's scientific and educational goals are facilitated by its location on the edge of Monterey Bay and its isolation from the university's main campus, which combine to encourage a sense of intellectual community and a productive focus on the marine environment and its inhabitants. However, Hopkins' location and isolation do pose their own risks. As with most field stations, isolation from the main campus has at times made the Marine Station vulnerable to closure when money was tight, and owing to its proximity to the shore, sea-level rise poses an existential threat. In these times of rapid environmental and societal change, it is important to recognize both the value and the fragility of field institutions such as Hopkins Marine Station.
title Stanford's Hopkins Marine Station: insights into the purpose, promise and peril of field stations.
topic Marine Biology
California
Universities
History, 20th Century
Animals
History, 21st Century
url https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41627203/