UW Sea Grant Videos University of Wisconsin Sea Grant Institute
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- Science
Check out a sampling of our videos. They feature partnerships and collaboration, science for the Great Lakes and underwater vistas.
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Ancient Oaks Tell Climate Stories
Oak trees in Wisconsin provide a record of rainfall going back 300 years. They're helping us understand what to expect in the next three centuries. This research is led by Evan Larson, a dendrochonologist (tree ring scientist) at the University of Wisconsin-Platteville.
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Revitalizing Local Waterfront Economies: The Great Lakes Legacy Act
The Great Lakes, a vital asset to 35 million residents, have a legacy of pollution due to our nation's industrial past. The Great Legacy Act revitalizes rivers, lakes, and harbors, known as Areas of Concern, helping to restore lost benefits. This video outlines the Great Lakes Legacy Act and highlights benefits it brings to communities.
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Shipwreck Exploration - Saturday
Day 3 of mapping the Australasia shipwreck.
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What Will Round Gobies Do To Great Lakes Streams?
Beginning in 2007, using funding provided by University of Wisconsin Sea Grant, UW-Madison ecologist Jake Vander Zanden and UW graduate student Matt Kornis set out to discover just what kind of impact the gobies might be having. Using nets and a portable electro-fishing system, Kornis and a team of student researchers sampled and analyzed goby populations at 150 different stream locations along Wiscosins' Lake Michigan coast.
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How Many Sport Fish Can Lake Michigan Support?
Harvey Bootsma and John Janssen, Wisconsin Sea Grant-funded professors at UW--Milwaukee's School of Freshwater Sciences, have their sights on the waters close to shore.
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Sturgeon Spearing on Lake Winnebago
Sturgeon spearing has its roots in the customs of many of the Native Americans who lived in the Great Lakes region long before Europeans arrived in North America.