Elmer Lund and the "Window on the Sea"

August 14, 2017 • by Nicole Elmer
header

Elmer Julius Lund (UTMSI)


MSI

The Institute for Marine Science in the 1950s (photo from Gulf of Mexico Science)

LUND AND THE MARINE SCIENCE INSTITUTE

The Marine Science Institute is located in Port Aransas on Mustang Island, a 20-mile long barrier island bound on the north by Aransas Pass inlet and on the south by Padre Island. The Aransas Pass inlet is a major waterway serving as an entrance from the Gulf of Mexico to the bay areas in the vicinity of Corpus Christi. The MSI is about two hundred miles south of UT Austin. 

It would take three attempts before a bonafide marine station for research was established here. The first time was in 1892, when UT's Board of Regents suggested to then governor of Texas, Jim Hogg, that the gulf shoreline of Texas was an “unrivaled opportunity…Strange animals and plants, a fauna and flora little known, invite the research of the student and investigator.” Eight years later, with $300, the Board established the first marine lab in Galveston, only to see it wiped out in a hurricane shortly after.

In 1915, UT made another attempt, with UT philanthropist and regent George W. Brackenridge donating $500 and his 144-foot yacht, NAVIDAD, to serve as the research station. However, another storm came, inflicting irreparable damage to the vessel and ending UT's involvement in marine science for some time.

red-tide

A red tide (NOAA).

Yet this was to change on the third attempt. A major fish kill occurred in Port Aransas in 1935, evoking Lund’s interest. He traveled there to investigate this fish kill of mostly menhaden and mullet, later determined to be caused by a "red tide." A red tide is a common name for an algae bloom when caused by some species of dinoflagellates. The bloom will take on a brown or red color, and often depletes oxygen or produces natural toxins, either of which can cause a large fish kill. 

To continue his investigation into the fish kill, Lund and colleague Dr. A.H. Wiebe constructed a rough-lumber one-room shack and laboratory on the old US Army Corps of Engineers dock. After Lund spent the summer of 1935 conducting research, he was left with many unanswered questions and found the resources lacking. He convinced UT to create a marine lab on the coast. In 1941, the Institute of Marine Science was officially formed, and Lund was its first director.

Serving as director until 1949, Lund would continue to push for research at the institute. He studied the distribution, life, history, and relative abundance of marine fishes of Texas, in addition to the physiology of oysters. Lund would also purchase 12 acres of land after the Second World War and donate them to the lab. He also established the scientific journal Publications of the Institute of Marine Science, now called Contributions in Marine Science, which is still published yearly by MSI.

dorm

Left: Lund’s shack on US Army Corps of Engineers dock. Right: the building today (UTMSI)

Share


header

Features

Meet Stengl-Wyer Scholar: Marina Hutchins

header

Features

Meet Thomas Schiefer