Hopkins Marine Station Stanford University

Hopkins Marine Station Stanford University Part of the Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability, Hopkins Marine Station has been a leader in marine science since 1892.

Join the last Friends of Hopkins Lecture of 2026 featuring Dr. Brooke Weigel discussing The Microscopic World of Kelp Fo...
05/13/2026

Join the last Friends of Hopkins Lecture of 2026 featuring Dr. Brooke Weigel discussing The Microscopic World of Kelp Forest Ecosystems.

Tuesday, May 19th, 2026 @ 6 PM at Hopkins Boatworks Auditorium and via Zoom.

Giant kelp can tower 100 feet tall, but half its life cycle happens at a microscopic scale on the ocean floor.

Dr. Brooke Weigel will explore the hidden microscopic world within kelp forest ecosystems. Her research at Hopkins examines microscopic kelp growth and uses genomic tools to study the diverse microbial communities living on kelp surfaces. Every square centimeter hosts 25 million bacteria—but are they friends or foes?

Join us to discover what lies beneath the waves in our local kelp forests!

Register here: https://bit.ly/4d89rJx

(Image credit: Mission Blue/Eduardo Sorensen)

"It's time to recognize the life cycle of the giant bluefin occurs primarily in the North Atlantic." Stanford University...
04/27/2026

"It's time to recognize the life cycle of the giant bluefin occurs primarily in the North Atlantic."

Stanford University Professor Barbara Block's statement captures findings from a groundbreaking 30-year study that could reshape Atlantic bluefin tuna management.

Published in PNAS, the research reveals:

🔬 Unprecedented scale: 1,720 electronic tags deployed across five nations show Mediterranean-spawned bluefin cross the Atlantic far more than management models recognize—spending years foraging in North American waters before returning to spawn

🛡️ Hidden driver of recovery: Lower western Atlantic catch quotas created an unintended refuge that protected both populations, proving critical to the species' rebound from near-collapse

📊 Striking disparity: 72% of recent catch comes from the Mediterranean vs. only 6% from western Atlantic waters

Allowing Mediterranean juveniles extended foraging time in productive North Atlantic waters—where they face lower fishing pressure—enables them to grow larger and produce more offspring, driving population recovery.

These findings provide ICCAT with critical data to optimize sustainable harvest levels and refine quota distributions across the Atlantic.

Barbara Block is the Charles and Elizabeth Prothro Professor of Marine Sciences at Stanford, a member of the National Academy of Sciences, and co-founder of the Tuna Research and Conservation Center at the Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability | Hopkins Marine Station. She pioneered electronic tagging technology to track the movements, physiology, and behaviors of large pelagic fish.

📄 Read the study: https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2535185123

https://sustainability.stanford.edu/news/tagged-tunas-reveal-keys-atlantic-bluefin-recovery

A Stanford-led effort combines bluefin tuna tag data and historical catch records to reconstruct the evolution of the fishery in the context of extensive movement and mixing. 

Star tunicates are marine colonial organisms that regenerate their bodies in weekly cycles driven by stem cells. This co...
04/23/2026

Star tunicates are marine colonial organisms that regenerate their bodies in weekly cycles driven by stem cells. This confocal microscopy photo highlights regeneration in progress, with newly developing buds glowing gold as they replace adult zooids, which are stained blue. These may look otherworldly, but they capture the fantastic variety of life on Earth and the extraordinary effort humans put into exploring and understanding it.

This image was captured by Tom Levy, a research scientist and instructor with the Stanford Institute for Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine, and based at Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability | Hopkins Marine Station.

Levy earned third place in the Research in Action category of the Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability’s 2026 photo contest, highlighting the Earth’s wonders.

Learn more about the annual photo contest here: http://bit.ly/4cpvrzi

Join us for the next Friends of Hopkins Lecture!Dr. Ashley Blawas (Postdoctoral Researcher, Goldbogen Lab, Stanford Doer...
04/19/2026

Join us for the next Friends of Hopkins Lecture!

Dr. Ashley Blawas (Postdoctoral Researcher, Goldbogen Lab, Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability | Hopkins Marine Station of Stanford University) presents: “Wearables on whales: Engineering methods for sensing physiology in the planet’s largest animals”

Wearable tech has transformed human health tracking—now it’s helping scientists measure heart rate and other vital signals in blue and humpback whales. Hear how new biologging tools are capturing first-of-its-kind whale ECG/heart rate data in Monterey Bay, plus behind-the-scenes stories from the field and lab—and what’s next for this research.

📅 Tuesday, April 21, 2026

🕕 6:00 PM

📍 Izzie Abbott Boatworks Auditorium + Zoom option available

🔗 Register (Zoom or in-person): link below



Wearable technologies, like smart watches and fitness trackers, have transformed the way we understand human health by recording daily vital signs such as heart rate, breathing, and activity. Despite these advances in human physiological sensing, few platforms exist to study these same vital rates i...

Students from Stanford University toured the station today learning about the history, significance, and current work ac...
04/18/2026

Students from Stanford University toured the station today learning about the history, significance, and current work across the various labs.

Matt Savoca and Jack Barkowski, researchers in the Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability Oceans Department based at Ho...
04/06/2026

Matt Savoca and Jack Barkowski, researchers in the Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability Oceans Department based at Hopkins Marine Station Stanford University, will be presenting at Monterey this Sunday, April 12. Learn more: https://whalefest.org/symposium

🎤 Symposium Speaker Spotlight: Meet Matthew S. Savoca, Ph.D., of Hopkins Marine Station Stanford University, and California Marine Sanctuary.

Speaking Sunday, 4/12 at 11:45 am. Join us for free at the Historic Stanton Center at Monterey History & Art on Custom House Plaza.

Topic: “From Watershed to Whales: Tracking microplastics from land to sea in Monterey Bay.”

Synopsis: Plastic pollution has become one of the defining environmental challenges of our time. Tiny fragments known as microplastics - pieces smaller than a grain of rice - are now found almost everywhere in the ocean. But how do these particles travel from our cities and rivers into the marine food web, and eventually into the bodies of ocean wildlife? For the past decade, I have dedicated much of my research trying to answer these questions. Between 2023 and 2025 we tracked microplastics from inland rivers to the coastal waters of Monterey Bay, one of the most biologically rich marine ecosystems in the world. We collected samples from four major rivers, beach sands, surface seawater, and marine life including small fish, krill, and blue whales. After processing more than 15,000 liters of water and 1,500 liters of sand, we identified roughly 25,000 individual microplastic particles. Beaches turned out to be hotspots, with concentrations about thirty times higher than nearby waters. Early results show that these tiny plastics are already moving up the food chain and reaching the largest animals on Earth: blue whales. By following the journey of microplastics from land to sea, our work reveals how human activities on land shape the health of ocean ecosystems, and highlights how and where solutions can make the biggest difference.

Bio: ‍Research Associate at the Hopkins Marine Station of Stanford University and a Principal Investigator at the California Marine Sanctuary Foundation. He completed his Ph.D. in Ecology at the University of California, Davis in 2017, where he studied why marine animals mistake plastic debris for prey items. More recently, he has investigated how microplastics flow through pelagic food webs, using Monterey Bay, California as a model ecosystem to study these processes. His work has been covered by NPR, The BBC, and The New York Times, among other outlets. Matthew is also an active science communicator and has given a TEDx talk, spoken with California State Legislators about plastic pollution, and has written numerous popular science articles for venues including The Washington Post, The Marine Biologist magazine, and The Conversation. He serves, or has served, on international expert groups convened by The Environmental Defense Fund, The International Whaling Commission, and the North Pacific Marine Science Organization, which presented him their Early Career Scientist Award in 2022.

🌐California Marine Sanctuary Foundation: ‍ ‍https://www.californiamsf.org

04/03/2026

As oceans warm and ecosystems shift, Stanford’s Hopkins Marine Station is helping detect trouble early—and prevent collapse before it begins.

Harbor seals are federally protected marine mammals.  Please adhere to the NOAA Fisheries Service's Marine Life Viewing ...
03/27/2026

Harbor seals are federally protected marine mammals. Please adhere to the NOAA Fisheries Service's Marine Life Viewing Guidelines when viewing our local seal population from the Monterey Bay Coastal Recreation Trail.

As a reminder, Hopkins Marine Station Stanford University is part of the Lovers Point-Julia Platt State Marine Reserve and the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary; our beaches support scientific research and related activities and are closed to the public.

https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/topic/marine-life-viewing-guidelines

🌊🦭 Harbor Seal Pupping Season in Pacific Grove 🦭🌊

Exciting news! The first harbor seal pup of the season was born Tuesday afternoon! Harbor seal pupping season is here in Pacific Grove, and our shoreline is serving as a safe haven for moms and their pups 💙

Yesterday, our Community Service Officers were out along the coast learning more about how we can help protect these incredible marine mammals—and how our community can do the same.

🦭 Did you know?

• Harbor seal pups are often left alone while their mothers hunt for food

• This does NOT mean they are abandoned

• Human disturbance can cause moms to stay away too long, putting pups at risk

🚨 How YOU can help keep them safe:

• Keep your distance!

• Stay quiet — noise can scare them into the water too early

• Keep dogs ON leash and AWAY from seals

• NEVER try to TOUCH, FEED, or MOVE a seal

• Follow posted signs and guidance

🛑 If you see a seal that appears injured or in distress, please contact local authorities or a marine mammal rescue organization.

Let’s work together to protect our wildlife and keep Pacific Grove a safe place for both residents and visitors—on land and in the sea 🌿🌊

📚 Here’s why scientists need librarians, including a spotlight on how the Harold A. Miller Library supports researchers ...
02/28/2026

📚 Here’s why scientists need librarians, including a spotlight on how the Harold A. Miller Library supports researchers at Hopkins Marine Station.

Librarians can be key research partners who help to scour the literature, manage data and make science open.

Address

120 Ocean View Boulevard
Pacific Grove, CA
93950

Opening Hours

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Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

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