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Marine Education Center

Coastal Explorer

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In this unique three-hour field trip program, teachers choose from eight exciting topics to create their own marine education experience. Field Trips are held at our state-of-the-art facility. Our 100-acre site on Davis Bayou in Ocean Springs, Mississippi, features indoor and outdoor classrooms, laboratories, nature trails and floating classrooms in a unique coastal setting. Program fees begin at $12 per participant. Owl Pellet dissections add $5 lab fee per participant. Shark and fish dissections add $10 lab fee each per participant.

Contact us at 228.818.8095 or marine.educationFREEMississippi today to book your trip!

Coastal Explorer Flyer

Choose three from the eight marine education modules below to create your custom three-hour field trip.

coastal reptilesStudents learn about indigenous turtles, terrapins, alligators, and snakes of South Mississippi. Students interact with lab specimens and artifacts in the classroom laboratory and learn how humans impact local wildlife. Educators start with the classification of cold-blooded reptiles and teach what physical characteristics distinguish crocodiles from alligators and sea turtles from tortoises. Participants will learn the biology of various reptiles, including the differences between non-venomous and venomous snakes.
coastal habitatsWhen the MEC team began their journey to create a "best-in-class" marine education center, professionals surveyed the entire area on Davis Bayou cataloging trees, habitats, and resident animal populations. The site features tidal marshes, maritime forests, coastal bayous and a forested Bayhead. Participants venture to the Osprey Point Interpretive Trail to visit unique habitats, observe varieties of plants, birds, and animals, and learn about the characteristics that distinguish one habitat from another.
water qualityStudents will collect water samples from Davis Bayou to test various aspects of water chemistry. In a guided setting, students will apply chemical methods for measuring salinity, dissolved oxygen, pH, and temperature. Students will learn how water quality changes with the seasons, how it impacts coastal wildlife, and how scientists monitor these changes. Educators teach about expanding dead zones, algae blooms and how upstream chemical runoff and other pollutants impact the water quality in the Mississippi Sound, the Gulf of Mexico, and beyond. 

plankton and copepodsUSM researchers are leaders in the field of cultivating copepods that are critical food sources for newly hatched fish in aquaculture systems. Students begin the session with a walk to the bayou and pulling a net to collect plankton. Returning to the laboratory classroom, students examine collected specimens under microscopes, identify zooplankton, phytoplankton, holoplankton, and meroplankton, and learn the differences between them. Participants gain an understanding of the importance of plankton in the food web and how changes in populations can impact the food chain in a coastal environmental system.

dichotomous keyMarine educators created a dichotomous key featuring local species to teach about taxonomy and classification and to help students learn the techniques to distinguish organisms. Educators demonstrate observation and identification techniques to aid in the critical thinking process to identify and evaluate morphological differences of fish, crabs, clams, snails and other organisms to their taxonomic level.
owlStudents engage in a learning adventure studying coastal birds of prey including osprey, swallow-tailed kite, bald eagles and owls, their nesting and hunting habits and ecological specialization.
Students work in pairs to dissect a preserved owl pellet to understand the unique digestion system of owls and their diet.
shark biologyLearn why sharks are apex predators and what our research scientists are learning in ongoing USM GCRL shark research in the Gulf of Mexico. Students work in small teams to dissect a shark specimen to gain an understanding of internal and external shark anatomy. Marine educators explain the seven senses of sharks, what's unique about their digestive system, and how they have evolved over millions of years.
fish biologyStudents work in groups of two to dissect a fish specimen to learn first-hand about internal and external fish anatomy. Educators explore scale type, digestive and respiratory systems and ecological adaptations such as fin shape and caudle peduncle. Students remove otoliths (fish ear bones) and learn how fisheries research scientists analyze the otoliths to chart fish age and growth rates all over the world.

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Coastal Explorer

Contact Us

Marine Education Center
101 Sweet Bay Drive
Ocean Springs, MS 39564

GCRL - Cedar Point

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Email
marine.educationFREEMississippi

Phone
228.818.8095

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