Lerner Marine Laboratory

The Lerner Marine Laboratory (LML) was established in 1947 by Michael Lerner on North Bimini Island, Bahamas, as a field station of the American Museum of Natural History.

The Bimini Islands, close to the Florida coast, and with the Gulf Stream on the west and a tropical lagoon on the east, make an ideal site for a marine laboratory. Founded with the permission of the government of the Bahamas, the LML was overseen by the AMNH Dept. of Fishes and Aquatic Biology, and was open free of charge to all major scientists and researchers. The LML provided researchers with living accommodations, boats and laboratory equipment, indoor aquaria, and outdoor pens for the study of sharks, sawfish, tarpon and other large fish. During its years of operation, hundreds of new species of marine and island fauna and flora were discovered, and the conch, an important part of the Bahamian diet, was studied in preparation for a conservation program. Much of the research conducted at the LML had potential applications in medical fields such as immunology, virology, transplant rejection and cancer. The LML was closed in 1977 for lack of funding, and a scholarship fund was set up in its place.

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2016-08-14 03:08:54 pm

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