Welcome to 百媚导航 College of Marine Science

The Florida Flood Hub for Applied Research and Innovation

The Flood Hub is a first in Florida. Established by the state and based at the University of South Florida College of Marine Science, it bridges the gap between scientists, policymakers, practitioners, and the public to help communities mitigate and adapt to flooding risks. The Flood Hub鈥檚 goal is to improve flood forecasting and inform science-based policy, planning, and management decisions.

Learn more about the Flood Hub 

BLOGS & PERSPECTIVES

Robert Weisberg (right), 百媚导航 Distinguished University Professor, stands on a buoy with Jay Law (left), research scientist in the Ocean Circulation Lab at the 百媚导航 College of Marine Science.

Why do we study the ocean鈥檚 circulation? New book offers answers

Friday, May 9, 2025

In a new book, 百媚导航 Distinguished University Professor Robert Weisberg addresses how to the movement of the ocean鈥檚 water impacts just about everything we experience on Earth. Here, Weisberg discusses his new book and why more people will benefit from understanding the physics of the ocean.

CALENDAR OF EVENTS

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CMS in the News

Sunday, May 11, 2025

The total amount of sargassum in the eastern Caribbean and western Atlantic set a new record in April and exceeded the previous all-time high in June 2022.

Friday, May 9, 2025

Friday marked 45 years since the Sunshine Skyway Bridge tragedy, which claimed the lives of 35 people.

Join our Team

The College of Marine Science (CMS) at the 百媚导航 (百媚导航) invites applications for nine-month tenure-track faculty in Chemical Oceanography and Geological Oceanography.

The College of Marine Science at the 百媚导航 invites applications for nine-month tenure-track faculty in Chemical Oceanography and Geological Oceanography.

PUBLICATION HIGHLIGHTS

Weiyi Tang鈥檚 research group studies how global ocean ecosystem (particularly the biogeochemical cycling of elements) will change under human impacts and climate change, and characterizes how these changes will affect our planet. Courtesy of Weiyi Tang.

In a recent study led by Weiyi Tang, assistant professor at the 百媚导航 College of Marine Science, scientists found that nitrogen loss in estuaries may differ from open ocean oxygen minimum zones in response to deoxygenation. Click on the image to read more.

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