Berwald is the author of the science textbooks Focus on Earth Science California, Grade 6, and Focus on Life Science California, Grade 7, published by Glencoe/McGraw-Hill in 2007.
Her science memoir, Spineless: The Science of Jellyfish and the Art of Growing a Backbone, was published by Riverhead in 2017. It was reviewed by librarian Elissa Cooper for Library Journal,[2] librarian Nancy Bent for Booklist,[3] bookseller Hank Stephenson for Shelf Awareness,[4] Leslie Nemo and Andrea Gawrylewski for Scientific American,[5] jellyfish expert Lisa-ann Gershwin for Nature,[6] Maura M. Lynch and Jinnie Lee for W magazine,[7] and Erika Engelhaupt for Science News.[8]Publishers Weekly included it among "The Most Anticipated Books of Fall 2017".[9] In addition, the book was briefly mentioned by Alex Crowley for Publishers Weekly's Fall 2017 Adult Announcements,[10] by Jennifer Ridgway for Brightly,[11] by Eliza Thompson for Cosmopolitan,[12] by Jane Ciabattari for BBC Culture's Between the Lines,[13] and by Chelsea Stuart for Jetsetter.[14]
An excerpt from Spineless was featured in a 2017 issue of Discover magazine.[15]
Berwald and Spineless were a major influence for artist Marina Zurkow's conceptual climate-change themed project, Making the Best of It.[16]
Berwald wrote about the publishing process and her book's difficulty of not fitting neatly into the science or memoir genres for the National Association of Science Writers.[17]
In April 2022, her book Life on the Rocks: Building a Future for Coral Reefs was published by Riverhead Books. The book combines memoir and science to study the coral reefs and the scientists, researchers, philanthropists, and filmmakers who are working to preserve their existence.[18]
Articles
Popular science
In 2009, Berwald reported for Wired on the creation-evolution debate in Texas and its impact on the state's science education standards.[19] This debate was further explored in her role as a school science textbook author in the 2012 documentary film The Revisionaries. Also in 2009, Berwald wrote for Oceanus magazine about the sedation of whales entangled in fishing lines,[20] the key threats to Emperor penguins,[21] and yellow-band disease in coral reefs.[22] She also wrote an article for Oceanus that same year about seafloor vents as an iron-rich nutrient source for organisms.[23]
In 2010, Berwald wrote for the University of Southern California on the value of editing.[24]
In 2014, Berwald wrote for HuffPost about the methods of searching for life on Mars.[26]
Also that year, Berwald contributed a New York Times op-ed[27] about the expansion of the Suez Canal, which was proceeding without environmental reviews. Her concerns focused on the heightened opportunities that the expansion presented to invasive species like Rhopilema nomadica, with implications for the Mediterranean Sea.
In 2015, Berwald contributed to a NatureNews in focus article about the Nicaraguan Grand Canal project. She noted its similarity to the Suez Canal expansion, in lacking environmental reviews.[28] She followed with a HuffPost blog entry in August 2015 about the progression of the issue and the increasing numbers of concerned scientists.[29]
In March 2016, Berwald wrote about the regenerative abilities of the moon jellyfish Aurelia for National Geographic.[31] In May 2016, in another National Geographic article, she interviewed Rachel Buchholz about her book Amazing Moms: Love and Lessons from the Animal Kingdom.[32]
In September 2016, Berwald co-wrote a Slate article with Elizabeth Devitt about Austin's focus on the word "weird".[34]
In December 2016, Berwald wrote for Hakai magazine on the uncertainty around and limited oversight of jellyfish harvesting and fisheries.[35]
Academic
Berwald wrote following article as part of her doctoral education at the University of Southern California:
Rodolfo H. Iturriaga, Juli Berwald, Gregory J. Sonek, "New technique for the determination of spectral reflectance of individual and bulk particulate suspended matter in natural water samples", Proceedings SPIE 2963, Ocean Optics XIII, (6 February 1997); doi:10.1117/12.266483
Interviews
Berwald was interviewed in a 1999 article about the automation of sampling equipment and data in oceanography and marine biology.[36]
In 2013, Berwald was featured in Episode 11 of Texas Business Women's Women. Connected. podcast about "Building relationships and rapport over Skype".[37]
Berwald interviewed author Stuart Rojstaczer in October 2014 about his book The Mathematician's Shiva.[38]
In November 2017, Berwald was interviewed about Spineless by Laura Rice for the Texas Standard.[39]
Personal life
In 2007, Berwald wrote for Redbook about how motherhood had changed her perspective on life, but that her 10 years as a marine biologist aided in other situations.[40]
In May 2014 on Medium, she wrote about her grandmother's impact on her life and her passing in April that year.[41]
Bibliography
Spineless: The Science of Jellyfish and the Art of Growing a Backbone, Riverhead Books, 2017. ISBN9780735211261LCCN2017-5838
^Cooper, Elissa (August 2017). "Spineless: the science of jellyfish and the art of growing a backbone". Library Journal. 142 (13): 110–111 – via EBSCOHost Business Source Premier.
^Bent, Nancy (1 October 2017). "Spineless: the science of jellyfish and the art of growing a backbone". Booklist. 114 (3): 9–10 – via Factiva.
^Nemo, Leslie (November 2017). "Spineless: the science of jellyfish and the art of growing a backbone". Scientific American. 317 (5): 77 – via EBSCOHost Academic Search Complete.