Foreword, Nipam H. Patel Introduction, Karl S. Matlin, Jane Maienschein, and Rachel A. Ankeny Part One Marine Places 1 Why Have Biologists Studied at the Seashore? The Woods Hole Marine Biological Laboratory Jane Maienschein 2 Marine Biology Studies at Naples: The Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn Christiane Groeben 3 The First Marine Biological Station in Modern China: Amoy University and Amphioxus Christine Yi Lai Luk 4 The Misaki Marine Biological Station's Dual Roles for Zoology and Fisheries, 1880s-1930s Kjell David Ericson Part Two Marine Practice 5 Illuminating Animal Behavior: The Impact of Laboratory Structure on Tropism Research at Marine Stations Samantha Muka 6 The Scientific Fishery: Sampling, Dissecting, and Drawing in the Gulf of Naples Katharina Steiner 7 A Dual Mission: Research and Education as Critical Factors for the Scientific Integrity of the Marine Biological Laboratory Kate MacCord 8 Francis O. Schmitt: At the Intersection of Neuroscience and Squid Kathryn Maxson Jones 9 Microscopes and Moving Molecules: The Discovery of Kinesin at the Marine Biological Laboratory Karl S. Matlin 10 Using Repertoires to Explore Changing Practices in Recent Coral Research Rachel A. Ankeny and Sabina Leonelli 11 Why Study Sex by the Sea? Marine Organisms and the Problems of Fertilization and Cell Cleavage Michael R. Dietrich, Nathan Crowe, and Rachel A.
Ankeny 12 Hagfish and Vascular Biology: Why the Marine Model Matters Marianne A. Grant and William C. Aird Epilogue: The Future of Biological Research Will Be Found in the Oceans, Alejandro Sánchez Alvarado Acknowledgments List of Contributors Index.