Posts

Silver Science

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Bethany told me to pick her up at the bus station. We had not seen each other in at least 6 years - in fact, "how long has it been" was a major topic of conversation on our car ride together. A lot has changed for Bethany since she was last at WHOI. For starters, she got a PhD, and I could tell. When I last saw Bethany, she was an inexperienced student just figuring out how to do science. Now, she is a seasoned professional with her own unique views on topics ranging from deep-sea biodiversity to data management to why exploration matters. It took us the full hour-long ride to Brewster and hour-long ride back to catch up.  Our destination in Brewster was the Cape Cod Museum of Natural History. I think of CCMNH as "the little museum that could." The facility is modest in size, but the content is high-quality. Displays range from the indigenous history of Cape Cod to native species in our waters, exploring human-environment relationships along the way. I actually cons...

The recruitment paper

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A juvenile coral captured in our photo survey Friends, I am proud to announce that one of my scientific studies has appeared in print. Just this morning, Coral Reefs published my team's work on coral recruitment in Palau. We surveyed juvenile and adult corals at our study sites in 2021 - 2023 to understand how early life-history bottlenecks shape community composition. This work involved deploying and recovering tiles , conducting photo surveys , and identifying thousands of corals . In the end, we found that the community composition of juvenile corals was different from adults at the same site - but it's not entirely clear why. Most likely, dispersal limitation, post-settlement mortality, typhoon impacts, and the inherent difficulty of capturing the astounding diversity of Indo-Pacific corals all interacted to influence the patterns we observed.   I encourage you to read the study for yourself. You can find it here, in the journal Coral Reefs : https://link.springer.com/art...

Little smooth bivalves

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Back when I was an undergraduate, I did a project on the taxonomy of freshwater crabs in Lake Kivu, one of the Rift Valley lakes in sub-Saharan Africa. I had plenty of experience describing and differentiating species of African freshwater crabs, so my advisor decided I was ready to take on the project. There was only one problem: all the crabs looked the same. It's not that I was inexperienced - far from it - but for whatever reason, in Lake Kivu, all the species of crabs lost their defining spiky features and became little smooth crabs. I eventually found a few structures that differed between the species and wrote reliable descriptions, but the process was far from easy.  Then during Covid, when I started foraging in the woods around Massachusetts (partly as an excuse to get out of the house and partly as apocalypse preparation), I came across countless non-descript mushrooms. My identification guide warned against picking "little brown mushrooms" with no distinct feat...

On community

"Life imitates art more than art imitates life." - Oscar Wilde Friends, we live in a fascinating world. Sometimes, it seems to me that there is an underlying structure ordering our lives. For me, that structure is largely composed of parallel lines: one line representing my scientific research, the other representing my personal experiences. The two seem eerily parallel at times.  I am a community ecologist. I spent my PhD years studying communities of animals to figure out how they were structured. What species lived best together, which ones preferred to be apart. Meanwhile, I moved across the ocean three different times, planting myself in a new culture each time. My experience reflected my scientific work: I was conducting a personal experiment in community assembly.  For my postdoc, I shifted my focus to an earlier stage of invertebrate life-cycles. I worked on larval settlement  while simultaneously settling down myself. My trans-continental wanderings led me to...

Harvesting

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Fisherman John, State Senator Mark Montigny,  and archaeologist Calvin Mires after a roundtable discussion at the New Bedford Fishing Heritage Center. Back when I was in college, the cafeteria workers put inspirational quotes on the centerpieces of our dining room tables. There was one that really stuck with me, though I'm sure if I tried to relay it verbatim, I would mess it up. I can give you the main message. It had to do with farming - or rather, farming as a metaphor for all other pursuits. For creative professions like science, you are not always in a harvesting season. Some seasons are for planting, others for pruning. Sometimes, the most productive thing you can do is leave the plants in the ground and just let them grow. You'll get to harvest soon.  Patience has always been hard for me. I'm one of those people who wants to harvest, harvest, harvest - in fact, my ambition almost always outpaces the resources at my disposal. That's the main reason why a random qu...

Equinox

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Friends, it is the first day of spring. Dear goodness, did that sneak up on me. I didn't grow up in an environment that valued or even paid attention to natural cycles - my life was more tightly regulated by the school calendar than the sun. But as I've gotten older, I find myself paying more attention to the climate around me. Circadian and annual cycles in light. Patterns of wind , waves, and tide . I study how organisms survive and adapt in the marine environment, but I'm an organism too. I should pay attention to my habitat.  The onset of a new season is a chance for me to check in with myself. If winter is ending, I should have finished all my winter projects. The spring projects beckon. Am I ready? This winter, my focus was on proposal writing . I have cranked out multiple hefty, detailed plans for scientific studies that I want to do over the next few years. Each one has about a 10% chance of getting funded. All I can do now is wait.  There was one item on my win...

Boston Sea Rovers

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Photo by Laura Castañón It was a sunny Sunday morning in Danvers, MA. The second full day of the Boston Sea Rovers convention was about to get underway. Sea Rovers is the world's longest-running dive show, with 2026 being the 72nd year. And I was the first speaker on the morning schedule.   WHOI's Dive Safety Officer, Kim Malkoski , is also the President of Boston Sea Rovers. The connection has been mutually beneficial, especially this year, when a dedicated WHOI session at the Sea Rovers convention put our research center stage. I got to the presentation room plenty early, connected my laptop to the room's A/V system, and tested my slides. Show time. My presentation focused on shipwrecks, my favorite marine habitats. I knew the audience would be interested in hearing about shipwreck research, too. Recreational divers love learning about historical sites and seeing footage of the diverse animals that call them home. In fact, Sea Rovers presentations are a great way to learn...