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by leaders
DIVISION STAFF
Scott Bennett, Manager, Marine Resources Services & Secondary Education, (508) 289-7375. Sarah Dundulis, Grants Administrator, 508-289-7632. Jean Enright, Manager of Student Affairs and Undergraduate Programs, (508) 289-7674. Cheri Gherst, Program Manager of Advanced Training Courses, (508) 289-7340. Carol Hamel, AdvancedResearch Training
SWOPE DINING
Your dining services team looks forward to serving the MBL community each and everyday. If you have any questions, please stop by for a visit or call me at 508-289-7164. We look forward to serving you. Erin Hummetoglu. Dining General Manager. 508-289-7164. ehummetoglu@mbl.edu. MARINE ANIMAL SUPPLY SERVICE The Marine Resources facility allows long-term husbandry and availability of many species normally out of season to field collecting and provides worldwide shipment of many organisms. For information about availability or shipping contact the MRD at (508) 289-7375 or (508) 289-7477. For a complete catalog of available specimens, see the linkOFF-CAMPUS RENTALS
To list a rental, Click on the "Add a Listing" button above, fill out the form and click on Submit. Your listing will be vetted by the Housing Department and, if approved, will be posted on the website. Please use the "Remove a Listing" button to remove a listing as soon as it has been rented. For additional listings, check the WHOICommunity
NATIONAL XENOPUS RESOURCE Mission Statement: The National Xenopus Resource (NXR) is located at the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, and serves as a national stock center for X. laevis and X. tropicalis as well as a training center for advanced technologies (e.g. husbandry, cell biology, imaging, genetics, transgenesis, genomics). The NXR is funded by an award from the National Institute SUMMER PROGRAM IN NEUROSCIENCE, EXCELLENCE AND SUCCESS The Neuroscience Scholars Program (NSP) is a two-year, online, professional development program aimed at underrepresented neuroscience researchers who are currently enrolled in graduate school or postdoctoral fellowship. The NSP provides monthly webinars and live chats on varying professional development and scientific topics hostedby leaders
DIVISION STAFF
Scott Bennett, Manager, Marine Resources Services & Secondary Education, (508) 289-7375. Sarah Dundulis, Grants Administrator, 508-289-7632. Jean Enright, Manager of Student Affairs and Undergraduate Programs, (508) 289-7674. Cheri Gherst, Program Manager of Advanced Training Courses, (508) 289-7340. Carol Hamel, AdvancedResearch Training
SWOPE DINING
Your dining services team looks forward to serving the MBL community each and everyday. If you have any questions, please stop by for a visit or call me at 508-289-7164. We look forward to serving you. Erin Hummetoglu. Dining General Manager. 508-289-7164. ehummetoglu@mbl.edu. MARINE ANIMAL SUPPLY SERVICE The Marine Resources facility allows long-term husbandry and availability of many species normally out of season to field collecting and provides worldwide shipment of many organisms. For information about availability or shipping contact the MRD at (508) 289-7375 or (508) 289-7477. For a complete catalog of available specimens, see the linkOFF-CAMPUS RENTALS
To list a rental, Click on the "Add a Listing" button above, fill out the form and click on Submit. Your listing will be vetted by the Housing Department and, if approved, will be posted on the website. Please use the "Remove a Listing" button to remove a listing as soon as it has been rented. For additional listings, check the WHOICommunity
NEURAL SYSTEMS AND BEHAVIOR The Neural Systems and Behavior (NS&B) Course is the premier discovery-driven training opportunity for the next generation of neuroethologists and systems neuroscientists. It is an 8 week intensive lecture and laboratory course held at the Marine Biological Lab in Woods Hole, MA, every summer.DIVISION STAFF
Scott Bennett, Manager, Marine Resources Services & Secondary Education, (508) 289-7375. Sarah Dundulis, Grants Administrator, 508-289-7632. Jean Enright, Manager of Student Affairs and Undergraduate Programs, (508) 289-7674. Cheri Gherst, Program Manager of Advanced Training Courses, (508) 289-7340. Carol Hamel, AdvancedResearch Training
CHILDREN’S PROGRAMS Ages 7-13 = $295/week (9AM – 4 PM) – located on the WHOI basketball court under tent with portable restroom facilities (staff to child ratio is 1:10) AM Extended Care = $31/week. PM Extended Care = $31/week. AM & PM Extended Care Combined = $52/week. Lunch is included in the program fee. As families register for the program,they will
MARINE ANIMAL SUPPLY SERVICE The Marine Resources facility allows long-term husbandry and availability of many species normally out of season to field collecting and provides worldwide shipment of many organisms. For information about availability or shipping contact the MRD at (508) 289-7375 or (508) 289-7477. For a complete catalog of available specimens, see the link MBL FALMOUTH FORUM LECTURE SERIES 2020-21 MBL Falmouth Forum Lecture Series 2020-21. For the last 30 years, the Falmouth Forum, presented by the Friends of the MBL, has brought free cultural enrichment to our Cape Cod neighbors. The Falmouth Forum series hits the airwaves in collaboration with WCAI, the Cape, Coast, and Islands NPR station. Forum speakers will join host Mindy Todd onJON HENDERSON
With sadness we share the passing of former MBL employee Jon Henderson who died on May 28, 2021. Jon was a Project Carpenter in the Facilities Department for 23 years (1996-2019).MBL EMAIL
The MBL Email has moved. Click on the link below to access the new Outlook Web App. webmail.mbl.edu. Use the instructions below to update your browser's home page and/or bookmarks MARINE BIOLOGICAL LABORATORY GIFT SHOP Marine Biological Laboratory Gift Shop. Item added to cart. View cart and check out. Close THIS CREATURE SURVIVED 24,000 YEARS IN SIBERIAN PERMAFROST MBL’s Kristin Gribble, who studies the rotifer to explore the biology of aging, comments in this article.. By Marion Renault. Bdelloid rotifers may be the toughest, tiniest animal you’ve never heard of. The microscopic, multicellular creatures have complex anatomies and are one of the planet’s most radiation-resistant animals. They can withstand extreme acidity, starvation, low oxygenANNE E. GIBLIN
Interim Director, Ecosystems Center Senior Scientist Tel: 508.289.7488 | Fax: 508.457.1548 E-mail: agiblin@mbl.edu Ph.D., Boston University 1982 B.S., Rensselaer NATIONAL XENOPUS RESOURCE Mission Statement: The National Xenopus Resource (NXR) is located at the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, and serves as a national stock center for X. laevis and X. tropicalis as well as a training center for advanced technologies (e.g. husbandry, cell biology, imaging, genetics, transgenesis, genomics). The NXR is funded by an award from the National Institute SUMMER PROGRAM IN NEUROSCIENCE, EXCELLENCE AND SUCCESS The Neuroscience Scholars Program (NSP) is a two-year, online, professional development program aimed at underrepresented neuroscience researchers who are currently enrolled in graduate school or postdoctoral fellowship. The NSP provides monthly webinars and live chats on varying professional development and scientific topics hostedby leaders
DIVISION STAFF
Scott Bennett, Manager, Marine Resources Services & Secondary Education, (508) 289-7375. Sarah Dundulis, Grants Administrator, 508-289-7632. Jean Enright, Manager of Student Affairs and Undergraduate Programs, (508) 289-7674. Cheri Gherst, Program Manager of Advanced Training Courses, (508) 289-7340. Carol Hamel, AdvancedResearch Training
SWOPE DINING
Your dining services team looks forward to serving the MBL community each and everyday. If you have any questions, please stop by for a visit or call me at 508-289-7164. We look forward to serving you. Erin Hummetoglu. Dining General Manager. 508-289-7164. ehummetoglu@mbl.edu. MARINE ANIMAL SUPPLY SERVICE The Marine Resources facility allows long-term husbandry and availability of many species normally out of season to field collecting and provides worldwide shipment of many organisms. For information about availability or shipping contact the MRD at (508) 289-7375 or (508) 289-7477. For a complete catalog of available specimens, see the linkOFF-CAMPUS RENTALS
To list a rental, Click on the "Add a Listing" button above, fill out the form and click on Submit. Your listing will be vetted by the Housing Department and, if approved, will be posted on the website. Please use the "Remove a Listing" button to remove a listing as soon as it has been rented. For additional listings, check the WHOICommunity
NATIONAL XENOPUS RESOURCE Mission Statement: The National Xenopus Resource (NXR) is located at the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, and serves as a national stock center for X. laevis and X. tropicalis as well as a training center for advanced technologies (e.g. husbandry, cell biology, imaging, genetics, transgenesis, genomics). The NXR is funded by an award from the National Institute SUMMER PROGRAM IN NEUROSCIENCE, EXCELLENCE AND SUCCESS The Neuroscience Scholars Program (NSP) is a two-year, online, professional development program aimed at underrepresented neuroscience researchers who are currently enrolled in graduate school or postdoctoral fellowship. The NSP provides monthly webinars and live chats on varying professional development and scientific topics hostedby leaders
DIVISION STAFF
Scott Bennett, Manager, Marine Resources Services & Secondary Education, (508) 289-7375. Sarah Dundulis, Grants Administrator, 508-289-7632. Jean Enright, Manager of Student Affairs and Undergraduate Programs, (508) 289-7674. Cheri Gherst, Program Manager of Advanced Training Courses, (508) 289-7340. Carol Hamel, AdvancedResearch Training
SWOPE DINING
Your dining services team looks forward to serving the MBL community each and everyday. If you have any questions, please stop by for a visit or call me at 508-289-7164. We look forward to serving you. Erin Hummetoglu. Dining General Manager. 508-289-7164. ehummetoglu@mbl.edu. MARINE ANIMAL SUPPLY SERVICE The Marine Resources facility allows long-term husbandry and availability of many species normally out of season to field collecting and provides worldwide shipment of many organisms. For information about availability or shipping contact the MRD at (508) 289-7375 or (508) 289-7477. For a complete catalog of available specimens, see the linkOFF-CAMPUS RENTALS
To list a rental, Click on the "Add a Listing" button above, fill out the form and click on Submit. Your listing will be vetted by the Housing Department and, if approved, will be posted on the website. Please use the "Remove a Listing" button to remove a listing as soon as it has been rented. For additional listings, check the WHOICommunity
NEURAL SYSTEMS AND BEHAVIOR The Neural Systems and Behavior (NS&B) Course is the premier discovery-driven training opportunity for the next generation of neuroethologists and systems neuroscientists. It is an 8 week intensive lecture and laboratory course held at the Marine Biological Lab in Woods Hole, MA, every summer.DIVISION STAFF
Scott Bennett, Manager, Marine Resources Services & Secondary Education, (508) 289-7375. Sarah Dundulis, Grants Administrator, 508-289-7632. Jean Enright, Manager of Student Affairs and Undergraduate Programs, (508) 289-7674. Cheri Gherst, Program Manager of Advanced Training Courses, (508) 289-7340. Carol Hamel, AdvancedResearch Training
CHILDREN’S PROGRAMS Ages 7-13 = $295/week (9AM – 4 PM) – located on the WHOI basketball court under tent with portable restroom facilities (staff to child ratio is 1:10) AM Extended Care = $31/week. PM Extended Care = $31/week. AM & PM Extended Care Combined = $52/week. Lunch is included in the program fee. As families register for the program,they will
MARINE ANIMAL SUPPLY SERVICE The Marine Resources facility allows long-term husbandry and availability of many species normally out of season to field collecting and provides worldwide shipment of many organisms. For information about availability or shipping contact the MRD at (508) 289-7375 or (508) 289-7477. For a complete catalog of available specimens, see the link MBL FALMOUTH FORUM LECTURE SERIES 2020-21 MBL Falmouth Forum Lecture Series 2020-21. For the last 30 years, the Falmouth Forum, presented by the Friends of the MBL, has brought free cultural enrichment to our Cape Cod neighbors. The Falmouth Forum series hits the airwaves in collaboration with WCAI, the Cape, Coast, and Islands NPR station. Forum speakers will join host Mindy Todd onJON HENDERSON
With sadness we share the passing of former MBL employee Jon Henderson who died on May 28, 2021. Jon was a Project Carpenter in the Facilities Department for 23 years (1996-2019).MBL EMAIL
The MBL Email has moved. Click on the link below to access the new Outlook Web App. webmail.mbl.edu. Use the instructions below to update your browser's home page and/or bookmarks MARINE BIOLOGICAL LABORATORY GIFT SHOP Marine Biological Laboratory Gift Shop. Item added to cart. View cart and check out. Close THIS CREATURE SURVIVED 24,000 YEARS IN SIBERIAN PERMAFROST MBL’s Kristin Gribble, who studies the rotifer to explore the biology of aging, comments in this article.. By Marion Renault. Bdelloid rotifers may be the toughest, tiniest animal you’ve never heard of. The microscopic, multicellular creatures have complex anatomies and are one of the planet’s most radiation-resistant animals. They can withstand extreme acidity, starvation, low oxygenANNE E. GIBLIN
Interim Director, Ecosystems Center Senior Scientist Tel: 508.289.7488 | Fax: 508.457.1548 E-mail: agiblin@mbl.edu Ph.D., Boston University 1982 B.S., Rensselaer CHILDREN’S PROGRAMS MBL is pleased to announce that we are partnering with YMCA Cape Cod and WHOI to hold summer camp on WHOI’s Quissett Campus and at theMBL Cottages.
NEURAL SYSTEMS AND BEHAVIOR The Neural Systems and Behavior (NS&B) Course is the premier discovery-driven training opportunity for the next generation of neuroethologists and systems neuroscientists. NATIONAL XENOPUS RESOURCE Mission Statement: The National Xenopus Resource (NXR) is located at the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, and serves as a national stock center for X. laevis and X. tropicalis as well as a training center for advanced technologies (e.g. husbandry, cell biology, imaging, genetics, transgenesis, genomics). The NXR is funded by an award from the National Institute MBL FALMOUTH FORUM LECTURE SERIES 2020-21 The Falmouth Forum series hits the airwaves in collaboration with WCAI, the Cape, Coast, and Islands NPR station.Forum speakers will join host Mindy Todd on “The Point” at 9:00 AM on the first Thursday of each month for discussion and listener Q&A. This page will be updated as details become available. OFF-CAMPUS RENTALSWHOI HOUSING YEAR ROUND RENTALSWHOI COMMUNITY RENTALSWHOI RENTALSMBL ANTIBODYMBL DEFICIENCYMBL BASEBALL As a complimentary service to our scientists and staff, the MBL Housing Department will list on this website, private housing available for rent in the local community.ANNE E. GIBLIN
Interim Director, Ecosystems Center Senior Scientist Tel: 508.289.7488 | Fax: 508.457.1548 E-mail: agiblin@mbl.edu Ph.D., Boston University 1982 B.S., Rensselaer CHILDREN’S PROGRAMS MBL is pleased to announce that we are partnering with YMCA Cape Cod and WHOI to hold summer camp on WHOI’s Quissett Campus and at theMBL Cottages.
NEURAL SYSTEMS AND BEHAVIOR The Neural Systems and Behavior (NS&B) Course is the premier discovery-driven training opportunity for the next generation of neuroethologists and systems neuroscientists. NATIONAL XENOPUS RESOURCE Mission Statement: The National Xenopus Resource (NXR) is located at the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, and serves as a national stock center for X. laevis and X. tropicalis as well as a training center for advanced technologies (e.g. husbandry, cell biology, imaging, genetics, transgenesis, genomics). The NXR is funded by an award from the National Institute MBL FALMOUTH FORUM LECTURE SERIES 2020-21 The Falmouth Forum series hits the airwaves in collaboration with WCAI, the Cape, Coast, and Islands NPR station.Forum speakers will join host Mindy Todd on “The Point” at 9:00 AM on the first Thursday of each month for discussion and listener Q&A. This page will be updated as details become available. OFF-CAMPUS RENTALSWHOI HOUSING YEAR ROUND RENTALSWHOI COMMUNITY RENTALSWHOI RENTALSMBL ANTIBODYMBL DEFICIENCYMBL BASEBALL As a complimentary service to our scientists and staff, the MBL Housing Department will list on this website, private housing available for rent in the local community.ANNE E. GIBLIN
Interim Director, Ecosystems Center Senior Scientist Tel: 508.289.7488 | Fax: 508.457.1548 E-mail: agiblin@mbl.edu Ph.D., Boston University 1982 B.S., RensselaerHISTORY OF THE MBL
For more than 125 years, scientists from around the world have been gathering at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole. The best students from top universities, up-and-coming young faculty known for bold experimental approaches, and successful scientists working at the pinnacle of their professions — an unmatched collection of researchers and educators congregates in the Village of NEURAL SYSTEMS AND BEHAVIOR The Neural Systems and Behavior (NS&B) Course is the premier discovery-driven training opportunity for the next generation of neuroethologists and systems neuroscientists. CHILDREN’S PROGRAMS MBL is pleased to announce that we are partnering with YMCA Cape Cod and WHOI to hold summer camp on WHOI’s Quissett Campus and at theMBL Cottages.
SUMMER PROGRAM IN NEUROSCIENCE, EXCELLENCE AND SUCCESS Applications to SPINES are also accepted through applying to the Neuroscience Scholars Program. The Neuroscience Scholars Program (NSP) is a two-year, online, professional development program aimed at underrepresented neuroscience researchers who are currently enrolled in graduate school or postdoctoral fellowship. MBL FALMOUTH FORUM LECTURE SERIES 2020-21 The Falmouth Forum series hits the airwaves in collaboration with WCAI, the Cape, Coast, and Islands NPR station.Forum speakers will join host Mindy Todd on “The Point” at 9:00 AM on the first Thursday of each month for discussion and listener Q&A. This page will be updated as details become available. SEMESTER IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE The Semester in Environmental Science is a 15-week fall semester at the Ecosystems Center of the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Massachusetts. The curriculum provides an intensive field and laboratory-based introduction to ecosystem science and the biogeochemistry of coastal forests, freshwater ponds and estuaries. AQUATIC MODELS OF HUMAN DISEASE CONFERENCE October 7 – 11, 2021 Marine Biological Laboratory. This page will be updated as more information becomes available. Confirmed keynote speakers: Erich Jarvis, The Rockefeller University; Professor Investigator, Howard Hughes Medical Institute SUBAWARDEE VS. VENDOR VS. PROFESSIONAL SERVICE (CONSULTANT) Use this checklist to determine what type of relationship is most appropriate for your project when working with an individual, company, or organization. It is important to consider the substance of the relationship when determining which type exists. OSP verifies theSEBASTIEN LAYE
Chief Advancement Officer. Sebastien Laye is MBL’s Chief Advancement Officer. His responsibilities include partnership development and private fundraising efforts supporting MBL leadership in securing financial resources and partnerships necessary for the operation and growth of the institution.KRISTIN E. GRIBBLE
Dr. Gribble is a molecular biologist broadly interested in the evolution, ecology and life history of marine and freshwater plankton. She combines her training in biological oceanography, evolution, and molecular biology to investigate how environment and genetics influence the phenotypic plasticity of life history strategy and morphology to allow adaptation to changes in environmental CHILDREN’S PROGRAMS MBL is pleased to announce that we are partnering with YMCA Cape Cod and WHOI to hold summer camp on WHOI’s Quissett Campus and at theMBL Cottages.
NEURAL SYSTEMS AND BEHAVIOR The Neural Systems and Behavior (NS&B) Course is the premier discovery-driven training opportunity for the next generation of neuroethologists and systems neuroscientists. NATIONAL XENOPUS RESOURCE Mission Statement: The National Xenopus Resource (NXR) is located at the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, and serves as a national stock center for X. laevis and X. tropicalis as well as a training center for advanced technologies (e.g. husbandry, cell biology, imaging, genetics, transgenesis, genomics). The NXR is funded by an award from the National Institute MBL FALMOUTH FORUM LECTURE SERIES 2020-21 The Falmouth Forum series hits the airwaves in collaboration with WCAI, the Cape, Coast, and Islands NPR station.Forum speakers will join host Mindy Todd on “The Point” at 9:00 AM on the first Thursday of each month for discussion and listener Q&A. This page will be updated as details become available. OFF-CAMPUS RENTALSWHOI HOUSING YEAR ROUND RENTALSWHOI COMMUNITY RENTALSWHOI RENTALSMBL ANTIBODYMBL DEFICIENCYMBL BASEBALL As a complimentary service to our scientists and staff, the MBL Housing Department will list on this website, private housing available for rent in the local community.ANNE E. GIBLIN
Interim Director, Ecosystems Center Senior Scientist Tel: 508.289.7488 | Fax: 508.457.1548 E-mail: agiblin@mbl.edu Ph.D., Boston University 1982 B.S., Rensselaer CHILDREN’S PROGRAMS MBL is pleased to announce that we are partnering with YMCA Cape Cod and WHOI to hold summer camp on WHOI’s Quissett Campus and at theMBL Cottages.
NEURAL SYSTEMS AND BEHAVIOR The Neural Systems and Behavior (NS&B) Course is the premier discovery-driven training opportunity for the next generation of neuroethologists and systems neuroscientists. NATIONAL XENOPUS RESOURCE Mission Statement: The National Xenopus Resource (NXR) is located at the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, and serves as a national stock center for X. laevis and X. tropicalis as well as a training center for advanced technologies (e.g. husbandry, cell biology, imaging, genetics, transgenesis, genomics). The NXR is funded by an award from the National Institute MBL FALMOUTH FORUM LECTURE SERIES 2020-21 The Falmouth Forum series hits the airwaves in collaboration with WCAI, the Cape, Coast, and Islands NPR station.Forum speakers will join host Mindy Todd on “The Point” at 9:00 AM on the first Thursday of each month for discussion and listener Q&A. This page will be updated as details become available. OFF-CAMPUS RENTALSWHOI HOUSING YEAR ROUND RENTALSWHOI COMMUNITY RENTALSWHOI RENTALSMBL ANTIBODYMBL DEFICIENCYMBL BASEBALL As a complimentary service to our scientists and staff, the MBL Housing Department will list on this website, private housing available for rent in the local community.ANNE E. GIBLIN
Interim Director, Ecosystems Center Senior Scientist Tel: 508.289.7488 | Fax: 508.457.1548 E-mail: agiblin@mbl.edu Ph.D., Boston University 1982 B.S., RensselaerHISTORY OF THE MBL
For more than 125 years, scientists from around the world have been gathering at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole. The best students from top universities, up-and-coming young faculty known for bold experimental approaches, and successful scientists working at the pinnacle of their professions — an unmatched collection of researchers and educators congregates in the Village of NEURAL SYSTEMS AND BEHAVIOR The Neural Systems and Behavior (NS&B) Course is the premier discovery-driven training opportunity for the next generation of neuroethologists and systems neuroscientists. CHILDREN’S PROGRAMS MBL is pleased to announce that we are partnering with YMCA Cape Cod and WHOI to hold summer camp on WHOI’s Quissett Campus and at theMBL Cottages.
SUMMER PROGRAM IN NEUROSCIENCE, EXCELLENCE AND SUCCESS Applications to SPINES are also accepted through applying to the Neuroscience Scholars Program. The Neuroscience Scholars Program (NSP) is a two-year, online, professional development program aimed at underrepresented neuroscience researchers who are currently enrolled in graduate school or postdoctoral fellowship. MBL FALMOUTH FORUM LECTURE SERIES 2020-21 The Falmouth Forum series hits the airwaves in collaboration with WCAI, the Cape, Coast, and Islands NPR station.Forum speakers will join host Mindy Todd on “The Point” at 9:00 AM on the first Thursday of each month for discussion and listener Q&A. This page will be updated as details become available. SEMESTER IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE The Semester in Environmental Science is a 15-week fall semester at the Ecosystems Center of the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Massachusetts. The curriculum provides an intensive field and laboratory-based introduction to ecosystem science and the biogeochemistry of coastal forests, freshwater ponds and estuaries. AQUATIC MODELS OF HUMAN DISEASE CONFERENCE October 7 – 11, 2021 Marine Biological Laboratory. This page will be updated as more information becomes available. Confirmed keynote speakers: Erich Jarvis, The Rockefeller University; Professor Investigator, Howard Hughes Medical Institute SUBAWARDEE VS. VENDOR VS. PROFESSIONAL SERVICE (CONSULTANT) Use this checklist to determine what type of relationship is most appropriate for your project when working with an individual, company, or organization. It is important to consider the substance of the relationship when determining which type exists. OSP verifies theSEBASTIEN LAYE
Chief Advancement Officer. Sebastien Laye is MBL’s Chief Advancement Officer. His responsibilities include partnership development and private fundraising efforts supporting MBL leadership in securing financial resources and partnerships necessary for the operation and growth of the institution.KRISTIN E. GRIBBLE
Dr. Gribble is a molecular biologist broadly interested in the evolution, ecology and life history of marine and freshwater plankton. She combines her training in biological oceanography, evolution, and molecular biology to investigate how environment and genetics influence the phenotypic plasticity of life history strategy and morphology to allow adaptation to changes in environmentalMBL A-Z | CAREERS
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NEW EXHIBIT HIGHLIGHTS LEGACY OF LEADERSHIP AT THE MBL Redirects to https://www.mbl.edu/legacy-of-leadership/. SALT MARSHES TRAP MICROPLASTICS IN THEIR SEDIMENTS, CREATING RECORD OFHUMAN PLASTIC USE
Contact: Diana Kenney, dkenney@mbl.edu; 508-289-7139 Semester in Environmental Science (SES) Student Claire McGuire prepares to take a sediment core sample in Waquoit Bay, Mass. WOODS HOLE, Mass. -- Plastics are everywhere. From cell phones to pens and cars to medical devices, the modern world is full of plastic— and plastic waste. New research from scientists at the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) Ecosystems Center found that some of that plastic waste has been accumulating in salt marshes for decades. The study was published in _Environmental Advances_.
Salt marshes are the link between the land and open ocean ecosystems, and — in a way —between urban environments and the wild ocean. Microplastics (plastic particles smaller than 5 millimeters) tend to float on the water surface, but salt marshes fill and empty with the tides, so particles that would normally float get trapped within branches and roots and settle into the marsh soil. Sediments accumulate in the salt marsh layer after layer, like tree rings, keeping an historical record of sedimentation within the ecosystem. “By accumulating sediments, they are keeping a record in time,” says Javier Lloret, MBL research scientist and co-first author on the paper. Globally, scientists estimate that about 8 million tons of plastic enter the ocean each year. But until now, there’s been no estimation of the amount of that plastic that gets trapped in salt marshecosystems.
By taking core samples of the marsh sediment at six different estuaries in the Waquoit Bay system on Cape Cod, as well as New Bedford, Mass., harbor, the researchers were able to trace the abundance of microplastics dating back decades in areas with very contrasted degrees of land use. “As you go into the past, the amount of microplastics you find decreases clearly,” says Lloret. “The amount of microplastics you find in sediments is related to the population numbers… but also the amount of plastic that people use.” A sediment core sample from New Bedford Harbor, Mass. with microplastic debris (blue flecks) clearly visible. Credit: MiriamRitchie
“Waquoit Bay is the perfect salt marsh system to study plastic pollution because we can contrast one area that is almost pristine… with another area that is highly impacted by human activity,” says Rut Pedrosa-Pàmies, also an MBL research scientist and co-first author on the paper. “We found a broad range of plasticpollution.”
The researchers focused on two types of microplastic pollution: fragments (from the breakdown of larger plastic pieces) and fibers (thread-like plastics which tend to shed from clothing and fishing gear). They found that fragment pollution increased both through time and with urbanization. The more populated the area surrounding the collection site, the more plastic fragments the researchers observed. One surprise in the data was that microplastic concentration in the sediments wasn’t linear as urbanization grew. Up to 50% development, the concentration of microplastic fragments was relatively unchanged, but once the land was occupied at 50%, the number of microplasticsgrew exponentially.
Microplastics collected from a sediment core sample in the Childs River area in Waquoit Bay, Mass. under 0.38 x magnification. Credit: Miriam Ritchi, SES student. "Just a few people in the surrounding area is not going to change much, but when urban uses occupy more than 50% of the land, the number of microplastics goes crazy," says Lloret. The microplastic fibers didn’t have the same relationship with urbanization. "Even in the more pristine areas that don’t have urbanization, we find fiber plastic pollution" says Pedrosa-Pàmies. Students from the MBL SES course work together to extract a core sediment sample from the marsh. The researchers believe the fragments have a local origin (people using and disposing of plastics where they live) whereas fibers can be transported long distances by air or by water from large-scale urbanareas.
"When we started, we didn’t know if microplastics were an issue here on Cape Cod, or not. No one had analyzed the marsh sediments on Cape Cod for microplastics before," says Lloret. Now that the scientists have shown there is microplastic pollution in New England salt marshes, the next step is to gain further insight. How are those particles arriving in the ecosystem? What are the sources? How are they impacting the ecosystem and the food web of the organisms that live there? "There are still a lot of unanswered questions," says Pedrosa-Pàmies. "This is the first step for management, too.' This work stemmed from a 2018 student research project in MBL’s Semester in Environmental Science (SES) program. Students from other MBL programs also participated in ongoing sample collection analysis, including SES, the National Science Foundation-sponsored Research Experiences for Undergraduates, and the Jeff Metcalf Summer Internship Program from the University of Chicago.CITATION:
Lloret, J.*, Pedrosa-Pamies, R.*, Vandal, N., Rorty, R., Ritchie, M., McGuire, C., Chenoweth, K., & Valiela, I. (2021). Salt marsh sediments act as sinks for microplastics and reveal effects of current and historical land use changes. Environmental Advances, 4, 100060. DOI: 10.1016/j.envadv.2021.100060 (* These authors share first authorship)###
The MARINE BIOLOGICAL LABORATORY (MBL) is dedicated to scientific discovery – exploring fundamental biology, understanding biodiversity and the environment, and informing the human condition through research and education. Founded in Woods Hole, Massachusetts in 1888, the MBL is a private, nonprofit institution and an affiliate of the University of Chicago. MBL BEGINS FIRST TEST OF TROPICAL SEAWEED FARMING FOR BIOFUELSPRODUCTION
Contact: dkenney@mbl.edu; 508-289-7139 A diver measuring the size of a newly outplanted bunch of _Eucheumatopis isiformis_, a red seaweed native to the Caribbean. The research team will monitor the algae throughout its cultivation to determine which environmental conditions and farm operations lead to optimal algal growth and composition. Credit: Loretta Roberson WOODS HOLE, Mass. and La Parguera, P.R. – A team of researchers ledby Loretta Roberson
,
associate scientist at the Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, has installed the first seaweed farm in Puerto Rico and U.S. tropicalwaters.
The research array furthers the design and development of a system for offshore cultivation of tropical seaweeds to support large-scale production of biomass for biofuels and other valuable bioproducts. “Puerto Rico has stable warm temperatures and ample sunlight year-round, as well as a wide range of exposure to prevailing winds and waves. These conditions make its southern coastline an ideal test bed for exploring how environmental conditions influence the biological, physiological, and chemical properties of cultivated macroalgae, as well as the impact of seaweed farms on the surrounding environment,” says Roberson, the lead principal investigator on this research effort. Additional farms are being tested in Florida and Belize to assess scalability. As the site is the first of its kind in the region, authorizations were required from numerous agencies including the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the U.S. Coast Guard, and the Puerto Rico Department of Natural and Environmental Resources. “Facilitating research of this nature will be key for the development of sustainable aquaculture in this area,” says Roberson. “We have tested similar farm designs in New England and Alaska, but this will be the first test of the array in warm tropical waters where we expect higher fouling rates from other marine organisms, UV damage, and threats from hurricanes.” Unlike kelp cultivation, which is usually seasonal, tropical seaweed farming can support year-roundharvesting.
The research team includes experts in ocean farm systems design, modeling of nutrient dynamics in ocean systems, environmental impact assessment and stakeholder engagement, and economic analysis. The team members are affiliated with an additional 16 organizations: Caribbean Coastal Ocean Observing System, University of Puerto Rico Mayaguez, University of Puerto Rico Rio Piedras, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, C.A. Goudey & Associates, Tend Ocean, University of Connecticut Stamford, Cascadia Research Collective, Center for Research and Advanced Studies of the National Polytechnic Institute Merida, Makai Ocean Engineering, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Rutgers, The Nature Conservancy, Two Docks Shellfish LLC, University of California Irvine, and University of California SantaBarbara.
David Bailey (Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution) and Loretta Roberson (MBL) preparing to dive on the seaweed farm site off Puerto Rico. Divers will conduct frequent ecological monitoring and routine gear assessments throughout the course of the project. Credit: DomenicManganelli
The researchers are currently targeting commercially valuable red algal _eucheumatoid _species, which are primarily cultivated in East Africa and Asia. To date, eucheumatoids have been difficult to propagate in a cost-effective manner and production has been limited to easily accessible areas near shore. In addition to developing the best methods for cultivating these species in offshore environments, the project team seeks to further quantify the ecosystem services associated with the farming activities. These likely include habitat provision for a variety of marine species and the improvement of water quality through removal of excess nutrient and buffering of pH. Cliff Goudey and Domenic Manganelli of C.A. Goudey & Associates/Tend Ocean, transporting the anchors, line, and buoys used for the seaweed farm off Puerto Rico. Credit: Loretta Roberson MBL received funding for this research from the U.S. Department of Energy’s Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E) competitive Macroalgae Research Inspiring Novel Energy Resources (MARINER) program. The MARINER program seeks to develop the tools to enable the United States to become a leading producer of macroalgae, helping to improve U.S. energy security and economic competitiveness. For additional information about MBL and this project, please visit: mbl.edu/tropical-seaweed/ .###
The MARINE BIOLOGICAL LABORATORY (MBL) is dedicated to scientific discovery – exploring fundamental biology, understanding biodiversity and the environment, and informing the human condition through research and education. Founded in Woods Hole, Massachusetts in 1888, the MBL is a private, nonprofit institution and an affiliate of the University of Chicago. MBL ANNOUNCES WHITMAN CENTER FELLOWSHIPS AND EARLY CAREERINVESTIGATORS
The MBL’s Rowe Laboratory, where many of the Whitman Center labs are located. Credit: Tom Kleindinst The Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) is pleased to welcome the recipients of the 2021 Whitman Fellowships and Early Career Investigator Awards, which support 19 scientists to conduct innovative research for up to 10 weeks in the MBL Whitman Center.
Due to COVID-19-related restrictions, nearly all of the 2020 Whitman Fellows and Early Career Investigators deferred until this year. “After last year’s restrictions, we are thrilled welcome this year’s Whitman Fellows,” says David Mark Welch, MBL Director of Research. “The magic of the MBL is its power to bring people together and offer scientists the space, time, and inspiration to pursue their research.” In a typical year, nearly 300 principal investigators, staff, and research associates from institutions worldwide convene in the Whitman Center, which offers them an unparalleled environment for collaboration. The MBL provides access to a diversity of marine and other organisms for research, state-of-the-art instrumentation, innovative imaging technologies and research, genome sequencing, and modern laboratory facilities. Due to ongoing social distancing guidelines, the MBL is hosting about two-thirds of the typical number of Whitman investigators this summer. The Whitman Center scientists interact extensively with the dynamic and creative research environment at MBL, which encompasses its resident scientists and international faculty, students and lecturers who participate in MBL’s Advanced Research Training Courses. Using a wide range of experimental research organisms, from sea anemones to sea robins and many organisms in between, this year’s Whitman Fellows are pursuing a variety of fundamental research questions related to cell biology and imaging, neuroscience, modeling, regeneration and development, evolution, genomics, marine biology and diversity, microbiomes, and more. Several of the 2021 fellows are coming to the MBL for the first time to launch new projects and others will continue research established in the Whitman Center in prior years. The acorn worm _(Saccoglossus kowalevskii)_ is being used as a research organism by one of this year's Whitman Fellows. Credit: TomKleindinst
The 2021 Whitman Fellows and their proposed research projects are: KAREN CRAWFORD, St. Mary’s College of Maryland _Beyond proof of concept: using CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing in Doryteuthis pealeii to ask important fundamental biological questions_ ANDRÉ FENTON, New York University _Integrating across levels of biology to learn how memory issustained_
SURESH JESUTHASAN, Nanyang Technological University _An investigation of the amphibian Leydig cell: from mucosal immunology to conservation biology_ VERONICA MARTINEZ-ACOSTA, University of the Incarnate Word _Photoreception in Lumbriculus variegatus, an aquatic annelid_ GERARDO ANDRES MORFINI, University of Illinois at Chicago _Axon-specific effects of neuropathogenic proteins on kinase-based signaling and organelle motility_ ANTHONY MOSS, Auburn University _Establishing a standardized, reproducible system for the study of geotaxis and mood in ctenophores_ ED MUNRO, University of Chicago _Dynamics of gastrulation and neurulation in ascidian Cortical septin dynamics during polarization in early C. elegansembryos
_NIKON FELLOW
INDU SHARMA, Hampton University _Bacterial cell shape and size as predation avoidance strategy inmarine environment
_E.E. JUST FELLOW
AVA UDVADIA, University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee _Elucidating evolutionarily conserved mechanisms regulating successful optic nerve regeneration in vertebrate species_ GERT JAN VEENSTRA, Radboud University _Evolution and development of cardiac cell types_ TREVOR WARDILL, University of Minnesota – Twin Cities _Encoding 3D space in the cephalopod brain_ FIONA WATSON, Washington and Lee University _Optic nerve regeneration_ ELIZABETH WILLBANKS, University of California – Santa Barbara _Biogeography of rapid evolution in bacterial symbiosis: the pinkberries revisited_
RICARDO ZAYAS, San Diego State University _Functional analysis of the transcription factor COE in the regeneration of the nervous system of the sea anemone Nematostellavectensis_
The 2021 Whitman Early Career Investigators are: VINCENT BOUDREAU, University of California – Berkeley _Stentor pyriformis: a novel cell biological model for uncovering evolutionary mechanics of photosynthetic activity regulation_ AMY HERBERT, Stanford University _Sea robins as a model for evolutionary trait gain in vertebrates_ DRAGOMIR MILOVANIOVIC, German Center for Neurogenerative Diseases(DZNE)
_Molecular detriments of synaptic vesicle clustering in the nerveterminals _
TETSUTO MIYASHITA, Canadian Museum of Nature _Functions of the “isthmic organizer” and the head-trunk differentiation of the nervous system in a non-chordate deuterostome (hemichordate) Saccoglossus kowalevskii_ CHRISTINA ZAKAS, North Carolina State University _Finding the genetic basis of developmental evolution_ TWELVE JOURNALISTS AWARDED FELLOWSHIPS IN THE MBL LOGAN SCIENCEJOURNALISM PROGRAM
Contact: Diana Kenney 508-289-7139; dkenney@mbl.edu WOODS HOLE, Mass. – The MBL looks forward to the arrival in May of 12 accomplished journalists who have been awarded a competitive fellowship in the MBL Logan Science Journalism Program.
Now in its 34th year, the Logan Science Journalism Program provides health and science journalists with immersive, hands-on research training, giving them invaluable insight into the practice of science as well as some of the major news stories of today. The program, which offers a Biomedical course and an Environmental course, will run May 27-June 4 in Woods Hole. Biographies for the 2021 Logan Science Journalism Program Fellows are here . Some of the fellows were accepted in 2020, while others are new awardees this year. They are:BIOMEDICAL FELLOWS
JAMES DINNEEN, Freelance Journalist (based in New York City) DAN DROLLETTE, JR., Deputy Editor, _Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists_ MOLLY ENKING, Weekend Digital Editor/Producer, _PBS NewsHour Weekend _ ALEXA KURZIUS, Managing Editor, _Newsela _ MATT REYNOLDS, Science Editor, _WIRED UK_ (London, UK) CATHY SHUFRO, Freelance Journalist (New Haven, Conn.) ENVIRONMENTAL FELLOWS KYLE BAGENSTOSE, Investigative Reporter, _Gannett/USA Today Network_ (Philadelphia, Penn.) FREDERICK BEVER, Reporter/Producer, _Maine Public Radio/New EnglandNews Collaborative_
KATY DAIGLE, Climate Change Editor, _Reuters_ TATIANA PARDO IBARRA, Freelance Journalist (Bogotá, Colombia) ANDRES PRUNA, Producer/Editor, _Univision KMEX_ (Los Angeles, Calif.) MIRIAM WASSER, Environmental Reporter, _WBUR-Boston_ In the Biomedical Hands-On Research Course,
fellows learn the fundamental techniques and approaches that underpin current biomedical science. In 2021, they will focus on cutting-edge technologies for imaging and analyzing the human microbiome; genome editing using CRISPR/Cas9_; _and DNA sequencing and analysis. They will also have ample opportunity to discuss concepts and innovations in biological and biomedical science with the program’s scientificfaculty.
In the Environmental Hands-On Research Course,
fellows undertake field research at a barrier beach, salt marsh and watershed ecosystem on Cape Cod. They discover the complex ways that added nitrogen alters coastal ecosystems, including their capacity to keep up with sea-level rise and impacts on marine life and coastalfood webs.
All fellows collect, analyze, and interpret research data, which they present at a mini-symposium at the close of the fellowship. They also have opportunities to explore the rich scientific resources in WoodsHole.
The Biomedical Hands-On Research Course is co-directed by Jessica Mark Welch , Ph.D., associate scientist in the MBL’s Bay Paul Center, and Joshua Rosenthal, Ph.D.,
senior scientist in the MBL's Bell Center for Regenerative Biology and Tissue Engineering. The course’s journalism advisor is Maryn McKenna , an independent science journalist, author, and Senior Fellow of the Center for the Study of Human Health at Emory University. The Environmental Hands-On Research Course is directed by Anne Giblin, Ph.D., senior
scientist and director of the MBL Ecosystems Center. Science journalist/producer Angela Posada-Swafford is the course’s
journalism advisor.
Over the years, the Logan Science Journalism Program has granted fellowships to hundreds of journalistsfrom prominent news
organizations, including _The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Science, _National Public Radio_, The Washington Post, USA Today, _CNN_, __and Scientific American_. Biomedical Fellow Olivia Willis of Australian Broadcasting Corp. training in microscopy and imaging. Credit: Maryn McKenna Environmental Fellows Sarah Kaplan of The Washington Post and María Mónica Monsalve of El Espectador field sampling in Woods Hole. Credit: Craig LeMoult The Fellows take a break from research to visit the Cape Cod National Seashore. Credit: Diana Kenney—###—
_The __MARINE BIOLOGICAL LABORATORY__ (MBL) is dedicated to scientific discovery – exploring fundamental biology, understanding marine biodiversity and the environment, and informing the human condition through research and education. Founded in Woods Hole, Massachusetts in 1888, the MBL is a private, nonprofit institution and an affiliate of the University of Chicago._ _The LOGAN SCIENCE JOURNALISM PROGRAM is sponsored by: George & Helen H.B. Logan; Friends and Alumni of the Science Journalism Program; Golden Family Foundation; Howard Hughes Medical Institute; Irving Weinstein Foundation, Inc.; Ross Foundation; and the Byron H. Waksman Fund for Excellence in Science Communication._ Visit GOFORWARD.MBL.EDU for COVID-19 health protocols, guidelines, and information. Please update your browser to view the iframe content. Your browser must support JavaScript to view this content. Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings then try again.News From The Well
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* Conferences and Workshops The MARINE BIOLOGICAL LABORATORY (MBL) is dedicated to scientific discovery – exploring fundamental biology, understanding biodiversity and the environment, and informing the human condition through research and education. Founded in Woods Hole, Massachusetts in 1888, the MBL is a private, nonprofit institution and an affiliate of the University of Chicago. 1996-2021, The Marine Biological Laboratory, MARINE BIOLOGICAL LABORATORY, MBL, and the 1888 logo are registered trademarks and service marks of The Marine Biological Laboratory. Join the MBL community:__ __
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