Oceanic biology is extraordinarily complex because of the diversity of organisms that inhabit the seas, the wide range of environments they inhabit, and the varied and complex ways in which they interact with and contribute to essential global processes. Research in the Biology Department at WHOI encompasses a diversity of organisms, levels of biological organization, and approaches. WHOI biologists study organisms from the smallest scale (marine viruses, bacteria, and archaea) to the largest (whales). Department members address questions ranging from molecular and cellular processes to population structure and ecosystem function. Aspects of oceanic life are investigated using powerful techniques of molecular biology, biochemistry, cell biology, genomics, proteomics, sophisticated acoustic and optical methods, behavior, ocean informatics, and mathematical modeling of molecular processes and population dynamics.

WHOI biologists perform laboratory-based investigations as well as field studies in local Massachusetts and coastal New England waters and at sites around the globe (Polar Regions, Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans; coastal, open water, and deep sea). Special strengths in the department include the ecology and physiology of microbes; bio-optical studies of phytoplankton; advanced optical and acoustic techniques for zooplankton distribution and behavior; the ecology, behavior, development, and genetic history of invertebrates; the behavior and distribution of marine larvae; fish ecology; mathematical analysis and computer modeling of life history, population dynamics and physical-biological interactions; toxicological and molecular biological research on pollution effects and adaptations; and acoustical, anatomical and behavioral studies of marine mammals.

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Jan 26, 2026
Moore, Michael J., 2026, "Marine mammal sightings NW of Boa Vista island, Cabo Verde, November 14th and 15th, 2000, with related cruise data", https://doi.org/10.26027/DATARCAV1X, MBLWHOI Library Dataverse, V1
Between May 3rd, 2000, and August 4th, 2001, a 55’ long sailing vessel ‘Rosita’ undertook a cruise around the North Atlantic, as described in the cruise report and log files archived here. This archive focuses on two days of marine mammal sightings in the waters of the Cape Verde Islands – November 14th and 15th 2000, with sighting details and imag...
Dec 22, 2025
Sung-Clarke, Serena; Ayache, Nour; Zhang, Wenguang; Smith, Juliette; tong, mengmeng; Brosnahan, Michael, 2025, "Imaging FlowCytobot Observations from Salt Pond, Eastham, MA (2015 and 2021) and a Dinophysis acuminata Culture Experiment", https://doi.org/10.26027/DATAGCCF2G, MBLWHOI Library Dataverse, V1
This dataset consists of four Imaging FlowCytobot (IFCB) datasets, comprised of images of nano- and micro-plankton triggered by particle scatter. Two datasets represent time-series observations from D. acuminata blooms in Salt Pond, Eastham, Massachusetts, collected in the summers of 2015 and 2021 from subsurface waters at an observatory platform a...
Aug 20, 2025
Sung-Clarke, Serena; Ayache, Nour; Zhang, Wenguang; Smith, Juliette; Tong, Mengmeng; Brosnahan, Michael, 2025, "Flow cytometric data from DAPI-stained Dinophysis acuminata (DAMV01) cells cultured in prey-saturated and prey-limited conditions over four days in March 2024", https://doi.org/10.26027/DATAFNVBB1, MBLWHOI Library Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:A3dKuAkyNYLCjtT2Ky8Kkg== [fileUNF]
This dataset consists of a flow cytometry experiment from two cultures of Dinophysis acuminata. Cell samples were extracted from cultures that were saturated vs limited in its prey, Mesodinium rubrum, every two hours for 96 hours (4 days). Cellular DNA was stained with DAPI, which was then analyzed for particle scatter (forward, side) and fluoresce...
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