Florida Institute of Oceanography


The Florida Institute of Oceanography, located on the campus of the University of South Florida St. Petersburg, is an independent entity of the State University System of Florida that works collaboratively with 20 institutions and agencies from across the state that support marine research.

Facilities

The FIO operates several smaller ships, as well as two research vessels. The flagship of the institute is R/V Weatherbird II, a 115-foot, 194-ton vessel, that was acquired and renovated in 2009, and soon made national headlines as one of the most active research vessels during the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill.
In 2017, FIO launched R/V W.T. Hogarth, a state of the art research vessel replacing the nearly 50-year-old R/V Bellows which had served as a floating laboratory for 35 years. The R/V W.T. Hogarth was named after Dr. William T. Hogarth, who served as the director of the FIO until his retirement in 2016.
Since 1990, it co-manages the Keys Marine Laboratory on Long Key with the Fish and Wildlife Research Institute.

Members

The institute is governed by the FIO Council. Council members serve two-year terms and are active members of the Florida oceanographic science and education community. In addition to advising the FIO leadership regarding statewide collaboration in oceanographic science and education, the council's key duty is to plan and align legislative budget requests with strategic priorities.

Research

Since the 1960s, the Florida Institute of Oceanography has unified marine science interests across Florida in the cause of understanding and stewardship of the coastal oceans. FIO has taken a leading national role in the scientific assessment of the impact of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.
FIO has emerged as a key research organization on the effects of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill with the award of $10 million from the oil company BP. In an application process which began in June 2010, the FIO received more than 200 proposals from researchers totaling more than $60 million.
To apply for funding, scientists were asked to develop research proposals related to the following scientific priorities in spill research: