History of Organization
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Jack Rudloe started GSML working from the back of his rusted out 1957 Plymouth stationwagon. Equipped only with a plastic bucket and a dip net, and accompanied by his Airedale Linda, he combed the beaches and explored the waters of the Florida panhandle in search of specimens. The story is chronicled in his first book "The Sea Brings Forth." |
| Hidden Treasure: The Steinbeck-Rudloe Letters 2005 Wakulla news:Steinbeck's Letters to Panacea 1981 |

In addition, Rudloe received encouragement and support for his efforts from taxonomists at Harvard's Museum of Comparative Zoology, the American Museum of Natural History, the Peabody Museum at Yale and the Smithsonian Institution who felt that the poorly known fauna of the region should be made available to the scientific community.
Gulf Specimen Marine Laboratory has 8,500 square feet of interior exhibition and program space, which houses approximately 30,000 gallons of seawater aquarium space as well as 1,000 square feet of pavilion space. It has easily accessible touch tanks and educational displays in three buildings, as well as a 300-foot dock and animal culture systems. These facilities house hundreds of species of local marine life used in educational and research programs in universities, aquariums and museums across the country.