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Greg Tolley, Ph.D. - Florida Gulf Coast University. Fort Myers, FL, US

Greg Tolley, Ph.D.

Expert in marine ecology | Florida Gulf Coast University

Fort Myers, FL, UNITED STATES

Greg Tolley studies estuaries, including the ecology of oyster reefs and the impact of freshwater inflow on estuarine ecosystems.

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Biography

Greg Tolley is the executive director of The Water School and professor of marine science at Florida Gulf Coast University. He is the founding director of the Coastal Watershed Institute and the former director of graduate studies at FGCU.

Dr. Tolley's research focuses on how variation in freshwater to estuaries can impact the ecology of estuarine organisms. He is also exploring the value of oyster reefs as an essential fish habitat.

Dr. Tolley was instrumental in developing the marine science program and has worked diligently in Southwest Florida to increase capacity and focus university research on coastal environments and the conservation of aquatic resources and natural assets that are used and enjoyed by Florida residents and visitors alike.

Areas of Expertise (8)

Science Education

Water Quality

Physiology of Estuarine Organisms

Freshwater Inflow

Estuaries and Estuarine Ecosystems

Oyster Reef Ecology

Coastal Environment

Coastal Science

Education (2)

University of South Florida: Ph.D., Marine Science

Marshall University: B.S., Zoology

Selected Media Appearances (21)

Will post-Sandy repairs be enough for the next big storm?

Associated Press  online

2022-12-05

Greg Tolley explains why it is important to find more sustainable ways to live along the coast.

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FGCU celebrates The Water School with open house

Florida Weekly  online

2022-11-30

Greg Tolley celebrates the opening of The Water School.

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New technology at FGCU’s Water School addressing water quality issues in SWFL

ABC7  tv

2022-11-21

Greg Tolley talks about the technology The Water School at FGCU has to offer.

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Environmental events abound throughout Southwest Florida

WGCU  online

2022-08-26

Greg Tolley discusses the Southwest Florida Climate & Community Initiative.

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FGCU Water School opens its doors after three years

NBC2  tv

2022-05-13

Greg Tolley talks about opening to The Water School at FGCU to students, faculty and staff.

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FGCU unveils new Water School building

Fox 4  tv

2022-05-12

Greg Tolley talks about opening to The Water School at FGCU to students, faculty and staff.

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Southwest Florida leaders meet to fight back climate change

NBC2  tv

2021-10-11

Greg Tolley talks about climate change and the Southwest Florida Regional Resiliency Compact.

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Red Tide causing hundreds of dead fish to wash up along Bonita Beach

Fox 4  tv

2020-12-17

Greg Tolley talks about red tide.

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Ocean Habitats installs more than 70 artificial reefs in honor of Earth Day

NBC2  tv

2020-04-22

Greg Tolley explains why artificial reefs are an efficient concept.

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Florida Gulf Coast University, Mote Marine join forces to fight red tide and blue-green algae

TC Palm  print

2019-04-04

Greg Tolley discusses the budding partnership between The Water School at FGCU and Mote Marine Laboratory.

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FGCU students hope Trump's visit to Lake Okeechobee brings change

Fox 4  tv

2019-03-28

Greg Tolley discusses President Trump's visit to Lake Okeechobee and the need for repairs to the Herbert Hoover Dike.

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FGCU Water School created to be ‘shining example’

Florida Weekly  print

2019-03-27

Greg Tolley is introduced as the founding executive director of The Water School at FGCU.

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FGCU focusing on water quality through new program

Fox 4  tv

2019-03-22

Greg Tolley is introduced as the founding executive director of The Water School at FGCU.

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FGCU launches Water School as it tries to expand research footprint

The News-Press  print

2019-03-22

Greg Tolley discusses FGCU's plan for The Water School.

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Sheepshead fish found with lesions covering body

Fox 4  tv

2019-03-04

Greg Tolley discusses fish illnesses.

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Editorial: FGCU in position to lead on water quality research, state should allow it to

Naples Daily News  print

2019-02-25

Greg Tolley makes the case for FGCU's ability to take the lead on water quality research.

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Florida’s red tide hurting critical stone crab industry

New York Post  

2019-01-29

Greg Tolley discusses the impacts of red tide on Florida ecosystems.

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Florida red tide hurts stone crab industry

Fox News  

2019-01-28

Greg Tolley describes the short and long-term ecological impacts of red tide.

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Red tide levels up in Charlotte County, could be heading south

NBC2  

2018-10-25

Greg Tolley discusses red tide on the coastline of Charlotte County.

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Will Tropical Storm Gordon impact Southwest Florida's red tide, algae?

Fox 4  

2018-09-03

Greg Tolley talks about the subtle interactions between tropical storms and Florida's red tide events.

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The News-Press Save Our Water Summit

News-Press  

2018-05-11

Greg Tolley speaks at the News-Press Save Our Water Summit at the Hyatt Regency Coconout Point resort.

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Selected Event Appearances (3)

Water Security

Save Our Water: Market Watch Summit  Fort Myers, Florida

2018-05-11

Oyster-reef restoration as a means of enhancing estuarine ecosystem function

Florida Oyster-reef Restoration Summit  St. Petersburg, Florida

2007-03-15

Managing freshwater inflow to optimize prey production for young estuarine-dependent fishes in the Caloosahatchee Estuary

Coastal and Estuarine Research Federation  Daytona Beach, Florida

2011-11-06

Research Focus (1)

Influence of freshwater inflow on estuarine ecosystems and aquatic resources

Tolley's current research interests focus on the influence of freshwater inflow on estuarine ecosystems and aquatic resources. This research addresses how variation in the timing, amount, and quality of freshwater delivered to estuaries influences the physiology of estuarine organisms, shapes community structure of oyster-reef and zooplankton assemblages, and impacts the potential value of oyster reefs as essential fish habitat.

Selected Research Grants (3)

Research programs at Florida Gulf Coast University related to the study of coastal watersheds in Southwest

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency $1,192,900

Jul 2005-Jun 2007

Long term monitoring of oysters (crassostrea virginica) in Southwest Florida: oyster monitoring in the Caloosahatchee River and Estuary, Florida

South Florida Water Management District $976,389

2010-2015

Freshwater inflow and utilization of the estuarine tributaries of Estero Bay

South Florida Water Management District $200,000

Sep 2004-Feb 2007

Selected Articles (5)

Recruitment of the crabs Eurypanopeus depressus, Rhithropanopeus harrisii, and Petrolisthes armatus to oyster reefs: the influence of freshwater inflow

Estuaries and Coasts

Tolley, Stephen Gregory, Bethany Bachelor Brosious, and Ernst Bryan Peebles.

2013 Oyster reefs provide structural habitat for resident crabs and fishes, most of which have planktonic larvae that are dependent upon transport/retention processes for successful settlement. High rates of freshwater inflow have the potential to disrupt these processes, creating spatial gaps between larval distribution and settlement habitat. To investigate whether inflow can impact subsequent recruitment to oyster reefs, densities of crab larvae and post-settlement juveniles and adults were compared in Estero Bay, Florida, over 22 months (2005–2006). Three species were selected for comparison: Petrolisthes armatus, Eurypanopeus depressus, and Rhithropanopeus harrisii. All are important members of oyster reef communities in Southwest Florida; all exhibit protracted spawning, with larvae present throughout the year; and each is distributed unevenly on reefs in different salinity regimes. Recruitment to oyster reefs was positively correlated with bay-wide larval supply at all five reefs examined. Species-specific larval connectivity to settlement sites was altered by inflow: where connectivity was enhanced by increased inflow, stock–recruitment curves were linear; where connectivity was reduced by high inflows, stock–recruitment curves were asymptotic at higher larval densities. Maximum recruit density varied by an order of magnitude among reefs. Although live oyster density was a good indicator of habitat quality in regard to crab density, it did not account for the high variability in recruit densities. Variation in recruit density at higher levels of larval supply may primarily be caused by inflow-induced variation in larval connectivity, creating an abiotic simulation of what has widely been regarded as density dependence in stock–recruitment curves.

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Acute response of the estuarine crab Eurypanopeus depressus to salinity and desiccation stress

Journal of Crustacean Biology

Horn, Julie Van, and S. Gregory Tolley.

2009 Hemolymph osmolality changes following exposure to abrupt salinity change in the range of 5–40 ppt (T=26∘C⁠, full air saturation) and upon exposure to air (T=23∘C,r.h. =30/ were investigated in the flatback mud crab Eurypanopeus depressus (Smith, 1869), a dominant species on oyster reefs in Southwest Florida. During salinity trials, hemolymph osmolality of E. depressus ranged from 751±123 mOsmol kg−1 at 5 ppt (214±32 mOsmol kg−1) to 1188±81 mOsmol kg−1 at 40 ppt (1188±29 mOsmol kg−1)⁠. In the salinity range of 5–15 ppt E. depressus exhibited a hyperosmotic pattern of osmoregulation while at 30 and 40 ppt it conformed. In all cases stable hemolymph osmotic concentration was reached in less than 24h⁠. During desiccation trials, hemolymph osmolality of E. depressus ranged from 971±121 mOsmol kg−1 for unexposed crabs to 1132±169 mOsmol kg−1 after 90min of exposure. The information obtained from this study adds to knowledge of crustacean stress physiology and may give a clearer picture of the important factors involved in population distribution and the consequences of multiple stressors that may affect the crabs or their oyster-reef habitat.

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The role of oysters in habitat use of oyster reefs by resident fishes and decapod crustaceans

Journal of Shellfish Research

Tolley, SG & AK Volety

2005 To assess the role of live oysters in providing habitat, community metrics of resident fishes and decapod crustaceans were compared among 3 habitat treatments: live oyster clusters; cleaned, articulated shell and sand bottom. Sampling was conducted during three seasonally wet and three seasonally dry months using 1-m2 lift nets deployed on an intertidal oyster reef in the Caloosahatchee estuary, Florida. Metrics used to assess relative habitat value included organism density, biomass and species richness. Species-specific comparisons were also made. Results indicate that organism density, biomass and richness were all greater for treatments with shell (live oyster clusters or cleaned, articulated shell) compared with the sand-bottom (no-shell) treatment. Two patterns emerged from species-specific comparisons: (1) species found in live and articulated shell (e.g., flatback mud crab, green porcelain crab) might require shelter; and (2) species found in association with articulated, cleaned shell (i.e., frillfin goby) might use empty oyster boxes for spawning substrate. There was little evidence to suggest that any of the decapods or fishes present were specifically selecting habitat with living oysters present.

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Environmental significance of freshets in reducing Perkinsus marinus infection in eastern oysters Crassostrea virginica: Potential management applications

Marine Ecology Progress Series

La Peyre, MK, AD Nickens, AK Volety, SG Tolley & JF La Peyre

2003 The effects of extreme freshwater events on Perkinsus marinus–Crassostrea virginica interactions remain unexplored. The effects of freshwater events on P. marinus infection in C. virginica and oyster survival were therefore examined in controlled laboratory experiments and a field study. For the laboratory experiments, oysters were collected in spring, summer and winter from an area in Louisiana where P. marinus is endemic. Oysters were placed in 2 recirculating water systems at a salinity and temperature similar to their collection site. They were subjected to 2 salinity treatments (freshet and control). Freshet events were simulated by reducing the water to salinities of 0 to 1 ppt over a 48 h period, and maintained for a 21 d period. Control oysters were maintained at the initial salinity. Thirty oysters were sampled prior to the freshet event, and 30 oysters per treatment group (freshet, control) were sampled on Days 7, 14 and 21 after initiation of the freshet event. Oyster mortality, P. marinus infection intensities, oyster condition index and oyster plasma osmolality were measured in weekly samples. All 3 simulated freshet events (i.e. spring, summer, winter) resulted in a significant reduction in P. marinus infection intensity, but failed to eliminate infection. The failure of the oyster plasma to reach very low osmolality (

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A broader view of ecosystem services related to oyster restoration

Marine Ecology Progress Series

Coen, LD, RD Brumbaugh, D Bushek, R Grizzle, MW Luckenbach, MH Posey, SP Powers & SG Tolley

2007 The importance of restoring filter-feeders, such as the Eastern oyster Crassostrea virginica, to mitigate the effects of eutrophication (e.g. in Chesapeake Bay) is currently under debate. The argument that bivalve molluscs alone cannot control phytoplankton blooms and reduce hypoxia oversimplifies a more complex issue, namely that ecosystem engineering species make manifold contributions to ecosystem services. Although further discussion and research leading to a more complete understanding is required, oysters and other molluscs (e.g. mussels) in estuarine ecosystems provide services far beyond the mere top-down control of phytoplankton blooms, such as (1) seston filtration, (2) benthic–pelagic coupling, (3) creation of refugia from predation, (4) creation of feeding habitat for juveniles and adults of mobile species, and for sessile stages of species that attach to molluscan shells, and (5) provision of nesting habitat.

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