Our research on coastal resilience was featured on the front page of the Chicago Tribune on Sunday, July 13, in an article titled, “Can artificial reefs in Lake Michigan slow erosion and boost fish population? Researchers aim to find out.”
Our research on coastal resilience was featured on the front page of the Chicago Tribune on Sunday, July 13, in an article titled, “Can artificial reefs in Lake Michigan slow erosion and boost fish population? Researchers aim to find out.”
In April, the Chicago Sun-Times featured research by the Lake Michigan Biological Station: Survey tracks smallmouth in southern Lake Michigan and the Calumet. + This article is behind a paywall, but you can read it for free if you watch an ad.
Our own Hillary Glandon was interviewed for an article in Inside Climate News.
Illinois-Indiana Sea Grant’s series, “Meet our Grad Student Scholars,” featured our own Amber Schmidt.
Hillary Glandon and Robin Matteus (ISGS) contributed an article to Outdoor Illinois: If You Build it, Will They Come? Initial Observations of an Artificial Reef in Lake Michigan
Lake Michigan reef mapping is making advances + This article is behind a paywall, but you can read it for free if you watch an ad.
Smelt or the memory of smelt? Tiny flash of hope for smelt on southern Lake Michigan, plus Stray Cast + This article is behind a paywall, but you can read it for free if you watch an ad.
New blog post from the Illinois State Technology Center highlighting our collaborative effort to improve the integrity and biological sustainability of our Lake Michigan shoreline: The post dives into the purpose and goals of the Rubble Ridges project that the Lake Michigan Biological Station is helping with. While our focus is on monitoring and enhancing […]
Fall shore fishing Chinook in IL: Roughly 50 hours per fish, according to INHS data + This article is behind a paywall, but you can read it for free if you watch an ad.
‘The next level of clean’: EPA grant to help assess health of Waukegan Harbor, Great Lakes * This article is behind a paywall. To access articles behind paywalls for free, please visit your local library for assistance.