See also the Brown University website feature article written for Brown University News by David Orenstein: "Galápagos waters illustrate ecological drama of climate change". This article covers the Witman Lab's many research efforts studying the effects of El Niño cycles and climate change on marine ecosystems of the Galapagos Islands.
Our work to describe the unique marine ecosystems on Cashes Ledge, a proposed marine national monument in the Gulf of Maine, is highlighted in the recent National Geographic February issue. The story is titled: "Why it's important to save our seas' last pristine places", and was written by Cynthia Barnett, with spectacular photography by our friend and colleague in the Cashes Ledge movement, Brian Skerry.
See also the Brown University website feature article written for Brown University News by David Orenstein: "Galápagos waters illustrate ecological drama of climate change". This article covers the Witman Lab's many research efforts studying the effects of El Niño cycles and climate change on marine ecosystems of the Galapagos Islands.
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For the first two weeks of January, lab research assistant Eliza Moore joined Jon, Robbie, and Franz in the Galapagos. Eliza has been with the Witman lab analyzing barnacle slides and fish behavior videos as well as managing our databases since 2012, but this was her first opportunity to see the field sites in person. She spent five days of the trip diving, mainly assisting with deployment of fish cams and barnacle settlement plates. Below, Eliza poses with a Porites coral at one of the Witman Lab's permanent coral transects on Guy Fawkes Island. On the very first dive of the trip, as Eliza and Robbie fixed plates to the rock walls at Baltra, they glanced over their shoulders to see six 10-foot scalloped hammerheads gliding gracefully by! It was quite a welcome for the first-timer. The final dive of her trip was also pretty sharky, with several black-tip reef sharks curiously observing the scientists at work at Guy Fawkes. Between camera deployments, Eliza had plenty of time to explore, visiting the small benthic organisms she has observed in so many quadrapod slides (over 2000 of them!) up close and personal! With the La Nina conditions in full swing, the invertebrate communities at most sites were lively and lush! Four days of diving were while living aboard the Queen Mabel – Eliza finally experienced the Witman Lab motto: “Dive – Eat – Repeat”! Jonas Lechert, a graduate student studying at the Darwin Station joined the Witman team for the Queen Mabel cruise, and we were all able to assist in each other’s research.
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Follow the Witman Lab's adventures, on land and at sea @witmanlab on Instagram and Twitter!
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