This course is about life in the oceans, from the sunlit surface to the inky depths, from microscopic phytoplankton to the great blue whale. The ocean is among the world’s most inhospitable environments for scientific research, which is why we know as much about the surface of the moon as we do the bottom of the sea. This course uncovers the evolutionary history of marine organisms, adaptations to life in water, the behavior and functional morphology of sea animals, interactions between species, and current threats. Throughout the course, we meet scientists who are developing ingenious solutions for overcoming challenges and are making remarkable discoveries. By evaluating these cases and analyzing real scientific data, we come to understand some of the ways that life has adapted to diverse ocean habitats, how it interacts with the physical environment and with other organisms, and why it matters to us.
Did life on Earth begin in the ocean? How diverse are marine organisms, compared to those on land? What are the forces that shaped their evolution, and what threats do they face? We begin our course by investigating questions whose answers are far less straightforward than you might think. Here we will meet our course authors and look through a porthole onto their scientific research. We will learn how destructive fishing techniques are affecting the ecosystems of squid species and how biofluorescence and bioluminescence help mysterious deep-sea creatures survive and reproduce.
What's included
4 videos3 readings1 assignment
Show info about module content
4 videos•Total 16 minutes
Introduction to the Course•2 minutes
Introduction to Module One•2 minutes
Explore21: Expedition to the Solomon Islands—The Tech•4 minutes
Exploring Greenland’s Icy Waters•8 minutes
3 readings•Total 30 minutes
How Life Evolved in the Ocean•10 minutes
Introduction to Biodiversity of the Ocean and Threats to Marine Biodiversity•10 minutes
Case Study: Marine Animals That Glow•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Module One Test•30 minutes
What are the physical properties of the marine environment and how do they affect life?
Module 2•1 hour to complete
Module details
Just as life on land depends on the air we breathe, life in the ocean depends on water. What are the properties of seawater, and how are they important to life? This week we will examine seawater’s chemical and physical characteristics—things like temperature, salinity, acidity, pressure, and the transmission of sunlight—that profoundly affect the organisms living in it. We’ll study how water moves through the ocean and beyond, in a great global cycle that includes internal motion like tides and currents, but also processes like evaporation, precipitation, and wind, which take place outside the ocean. Then we will look at how organisms take advantage of all this motion. How do the water’s properties allow marine life to find food, escape from predators, meet mates, and spread their offspring? Finally, we will a visit with a bioengineer who designs her own equipment to create pulsing images of a previously little-studied organism, a gelatinous filter-feeder that’s enormously important in its ecosystem.
What's included
2 videos4 readings1 assignment
Show info about module content
2 videos•Total 11 minutes
Introduction to Module Two•3 minutes
Undersea Tech and Ocean Exploration with Kakani Katija•8 minutes
4 readings•Total 40 minutes
Physical Properties of the Ocean•10 minutes
Living in Water: Tides, Currents, and How Organisms Use Water Motion for Advantage•10 minutes
Living in Water: Reproduction, Dispersal, and Migration•10 minutes
Case Study: Animals That Live in Mucus Houses•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Module Two Test•30 minutes
How do species interact in the ocean?
Module 3•1 hour to complete
Module details
This week we will examine another aspect of motion underwater: how matter and energy move through marine ecosystems, from the photosynthetic organisms that capture sunlight at the base of the food pyramid to the huge predators at the top, as well as the organisms that cycle waste and dead creatures back into the system. What lives where, and why? How do the movement of matter and energy affect the patterns of life in the ocean?We will take a closer look at principles of ecology and how they apply in marine environments. How do species interact within a community? How do they help and harm one another, and how do their interactions drive their evolution? In a case study, we will visit a marine scientist who studies dolphins that herd their prey and find out about the daily migrations those prey species make between deep and shallow waters.
What's included
3 videos3 readings1 assignment
Show info about module content
3 videos•Total 29 minutes
Introduction to Module Three•2 minutes
Acoustic Exploration of the Ocean•8 minutes
Some Animals are More Equal than Others: Keystone Species and Trophic Cascades•19 minutes
3 readings•Total 30 minutes
Case Study: Listening to Life in the Deep•10 minutes
Flow of Matter and Energy in Marine Ecosystems•10 minutes
Patterns of Interactions Among Marine Species•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Module Three Test•30 minutes
Giants of the Sea: How did Blue Whales Get So Big? (A Case Study)
Module 4•2 hours to complete
Module details
Blue whales are the largest animals that ever lived and have among the longest migrations of any mammalian species. Their massive body size and range bring with them a unique set of challenges. How do blue whales get enough energy feasting on just tiny krill? A group of scientists, including biologist Jeremy Goldbogen at Hopkins Marine Station at Stanford University, has revolutionized the study of whale behavior by developing and deploying multi-sensor tags on whales. The scientists look for patterns in their data in order to understand what whales are doing during their deep dives, and what this behavior reveals about the ecosystems the whales inhabit.
What's included
4 videos4 readings1 assignment
Show info about module content
4 videos•Total 22 minutes
Giants of the Sea, Part 1: How did blue whales get so big?•5 minutes
Giants of the Sea, Part 2: What happens underwater?•5 minutes
Giants of the Sea, Part 3: How does a blue whale feed?•6 minutes
Giants of the Sea, Part 4: Why Does a Whale’s Feeding Behavior Matter?•6 minutes
4 readings•Total 40 minutes
Giants of the Sea, Part 1: How did blue whales get so big?•10 minutes
Giants of the Sea, Part 2: What happens underwater?•10 minutes
Giants of the Sea, Part 3: How does a blue whale feed?•10 minutes
Giants of the Sea, Part 4: Why does a whale’s feeding behavior matter?•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Module Four Test•30 minutes
How are Marine Ecosystems Important?
Module 5•1 hour to complete
Module details
The threats to ocean life are numerous and dire, but they are not foretold. For example, “super corals” appear to be resistant to warming waters and scientists are successfully replanting samples in vulnerable reefs. This week we investigate the relationship between humans and the ocean: the services the oceans provide, how those services are threatened by human activity, and what might be done to mitigate these threats. We also look at a number of other scientists who are working from many disciplines on conservation strategies.
What's included
4 videos3 readings1 assignment
Show info about module content
4 videos•Total 16 minutes
Super Corals—For the Future (Part 1)•4 minutes
Super Corals—A Closer Look (Part 2)•3 minutes
Super Corals—Understanding the Science (Part 3)•3 minutes
Sharks—The Present•6 minutes
3 readings•Total 30 minutes
Case Study: The Race to Save the Reefs•10 minutes
Marine Ecosystem Functions and Ecosystem Services•10 minutes
How Conservation Biologists Are Working on Conservation Strategies Strategies•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Module Five Test•30 minutes
Instructor
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The American Museum of Natural History is one of the world’s preeminent scientific, educational and cultural institutions. Since its founding in 1869, the Museum has advanced its global mission to discover, interpret, and disseminate information about human cultures, the natural world, and the universe through a wide-ranging program of scientific research, education, and exhibition.
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CD
5·
Reviewed on Nov 26, 2024
Great course, very informative, had a variety of topics so it wasn't all the same. All recourses were great quality, overall an amazing course to take. Just got my overall grade of 96.68%!!
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YM
4·
Reviewed on Jun 20, 2024
really a helpful course loved the most of but my only complaint is that the essays were too long and continuos to take in at one time . loved this course btw!!
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MH
5·
Reviewed on Jan 27, 2025
Wonderful course! Truly gave me a foundational knowledge of many topics pertinent to the field of Marine Biology. Beyond that, it was also enjoyable and engaging.
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