Skip to content Skip to navigation

Home

Welcome

Research * Technology * Conservation * Diversity

Spring quarter applications are due February 15.

The slate of courses fills many different degree requirements.

Course offerings for:

Spring    Summer    Autumn   Winter

Spring Courses

BIO 3N: Views of a Changing Sea: Literature & ScienceBIO 3N: Views of a Changing Sea: Literature & ScienceBIOHOPK 43: Plant BiologyBIOHOPK 43: Plant BiologyBIOHOPK 44Y: Core LabBIOHOPK 44Y: Core LabBIOHOPK 150H: Ecological MechanicsBIOHOPK 150H: Ecological MechanicsBIOHOPK 167H: Nerve Muscle and SynapseBIOHOPK 167H: Nerve Muscle and SynapseBIOHOPK 168H: Disease EcologyBIOHOPK 168H: Disease EcologyBIOHOPK 173H: Marine Conservation BiologyBIOHOPK 173H: Marine Conservation BiologyBIOHOPK 174H: Experimental Design & ProbabilityBIOHOPK 174H: Experimental Design & ProbabilityBIOHOPK 199H: Undergraduate ResearchBIOHOPK 199H: Undergraduate ResearchPrevious Slide 1/9 Next

Faculty Research

Coral Bleaching Video

Steve Palumbi's work among "The 10 Best Science Images, Videos, And Visualizations Of The Year"

Popular Science

Student Research

Graduate Student Symposium: three students share their fascinating work

Graduate Student Symposium: three students share their fascinating work at Friends Lecture

Friends of Hopkins

Current News

Austin Ayer and Steve Palumbi preparing DNA for analysis

Hakai Magazine has just published a story by Pulitzer prize winning journalist Ken Weiss about the work of Austin Ayers, one of our Biology Honors Thesis students and his quest for finding the shark in shark fin soup.

Hakai Magazine

Upcoming Events

Mar
11

SEMINAR: noon-1pm Boat Works, Steve Gaines, University of California, Santa Barbara, The future of food from the sea

 

Apr
1

SEMINAR: noon-1pm Boat Works, Carolyn Friedman, University of Washington

 

Apr
8

SEMINAR: noon-1pm Boat Works, Stephen Munch, NOAA Southwest Fisheries Science Center

Close up of the ventral pleats of a fin whale (Balaenoptera physalus)
Close up of the ventral
pleats of a fin whale

Research Spotlight:

Goldbogen Lab

In the Goldbogen Lab at Hopkins Marine Station, researchers are harnessing new technologies, from accelerometers and hydrophones to underwater cameras and 3D printers, to demystify these leviathans. The lab’s groundbreaking methods provide insight not only into what goes on under the surface of the ocean, but also into what happens, mechanically and physiologically, inside the body of a whale.
more . . .