Gulf Specimen Marine Lab
Places To Be Sights To See Events & Activities Places To Stay

Letter_m.gif (747 bytes)ost of us have never seen what really lives in the ocean - tiny green shrimp and scarlet sponges, crystal and glittering jelly fish. At Gulf Specimen Marine Laboratory, you get a better sense of the enormous diversity of life on earth.   Unlike most large public acuaria that emphasize porpoises and big fishes, they focus on sea horses, hermit crabs, emerald eyed spiny box fish, red and white spotted calico crabs -- all endless living treasures of the North Florida Wilderness Coast.

seahorse.jpg (3702 bytes)Water bubbles and flows in a swirl that sustains our unique collection of the bizarre and the beautiful.  Seahorses hide in the seaweed, their black and bronze hads dusted with gold flecks. Starfish glide effrtlessly over the sand and sometimes an octopus will come out of its burrow.  Red hermit crabs with bright blue eyes carry waving sea anemones on their shells.

Together with animals that look like plants and plants unlike any on land, they challenge our concept of what it means to be an animal, what it means to be alive!

coral.jpg (4651 bytes)Gulf Specimen Marine Laboratory has been in the business of supplying marine animals and developing specialized aquarium systems for more than 25 years. The marine biological supply division supports the laboratory, provides a constant flow of animals coming through the lab, and creates an exhibit that is constantly changing. A variety of invertebrates, fishes and algae are routinely collected and sold to schools and laboratories. It's never the same twice.

marinelab.jpg (2886 bytes)Gulf Specimen Marine Laboratory is 30 miles and 45 minutes from Tallahassee, the state capital of Florida.  Take US 319 south to US 98 west to Panacea.

Hours

Monday through Friday 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Saturday 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Sunday 12:00 - 4 p.m.

Visit Gulf Specimen Web Site


grass_icon.jpg (1082 bytes)grass_icon.jpg (1082 bytes)grass_icon.jpg (1082 bytes)

 



©2007 Wakulla County Tourist Development Council

Need help? Contact webmaster