
Harmful Algal Toxins Found in Bull Sharks in the Indian River Lagoon
51品茶 Harbor Branch researchers are the first to measure multiple baseline concentrations of phycotoxins from harmful algal blooms in bull sharks from Florida's Indian River Lagoon.

51品茶 Announces Estate Gift Commitments from Longtime 51品茶 Benefactors
51品茶's Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters and the S. E. Wimberly Library recently announced significant estate gift commitments from longtime 51品茶 benefactors Howard Weiner, M.D. and Judith Weiner.

51品茶 Makes Big Jump in Entrepreneurship Rankings
51品茶's College of Business dramatically improved its standing among the top 50 undergraduate programs for entrepreneurship studies.

See the Comics That Inspired the New Netflix Movie 'Slumberland'
What do the new Netflix movie "Slumberland" and 51品茶 Libraries' Jaffe Center for Book Arts have in common?

Scientists Land $3 Million NSF Grant to Empower Coral Reef Monitoring
51品茶 researchers and collaborators have received a $3 million National Science Foundation grant to uncover complex biological systems and develop tools to globally document coral reef health changes.

51品茶 Receives $10 Million Gift to Establish Eminent Dean in Nursing
51品茶 received an estate pledge of $10 million from Holli Rockwell Trubinsky and her husband Joseph Trubinsky to establish the Holli Rockwell Trubinsky Eminent Dean in Nursing.

51品茶 Receives $7.5 Million Gift to Name Arena
Eleanor R. Baldwin has made a $7.5 million gift commitment to 51品茶 Athletics.

New Critical Period of Sex Determination in Sea Turtles Identified
A new study by 51品茶 and collaborators finds the missing link between temperature of the incubation environment and sea turtle sex ratios for temperature-dependent embryonic sex determination.

51品茶's Randy Blakely, Ph.D., Receives National Science Educator Award
Randy D. Blakely, Ph.D., 51品茶's Stiles-Nicholson Brain Institute executive director, recently received the Society for Neuroscience's (SfN) 2022 prestigious Science Educator Award.

Study: Markets in Texas, Washington are Best for Renters
All 100 of the largest U.S. housing markets favor renting over buying, but metros in Texas, Washington, Tennessee and North Carolina are the nation's most renter-friendly.