Eelgrass (Zostera marina) is a marine flowering plant that provides important ecological, environmental, and economic services in the Puget Sound. Z. marina reproduces both asexually and sexually; however, the cellular regulation behind each mode of reproduction is poorly understood. Establishing Z. marina’s regulation behind sexual reproduction will improve predictions of Z. marina’s resilience to anthropogenic pressures. FLOWERING LOCUS (FT) is a highly conserved gene that promotes floral development in flowering plants and is well-characterized in the model organism A. thaliana. As a marine flowering plant, we hypothesized that a homologous, functionall FT exists within Z. marina. We identified 13 candidate Z. marina FT homologs (ZmFT), and from analysis of relative flowering time, 5 homologs of interest emerged: 2 that promote flowering, 2 that inhibit flowering, and 1 that has striking sequence conservation to A. thaliana FT, yet has no observable impact on flowering. To determine how intracellular distinctions alter the function of these respective Z. marina FT homologs, I am currently investigating putative protein-protein interactions of the ZmFT homologs with components of the A. thaliana floral activating complex, such floral promoting transcription factors, and scaffold proteins . I can characterize these protein-protein interactions using Yeast Two-Hybrid assays (Y2H) and BiFC fluorescent microscopy In which protein-protein interactions between ZmFT and A.thaliana floral complex proteins yields either yeast strains with conferred prototrophy, in Y2H, or a fluorescent signal, in BiFC. From my Y2H and BiFC work, I will characterize interactions of the ZmFT homolog proteins, with known components of the A. thaliana flowering pathway. The results of this study will help define how Z. marina regulates flowering onset and sexual reproduction.