Saturday, June 26, 2010

pictures (look down...)

picture 1: view from the floating dock at Bigelow, looking up towards the main building. Photo taken during low tide, water rises an additional 9 ft during high tide here!

picture 2: view from the stationary dock at Bigelow, still looking twards the main building.

picture 3: view from where pic2 was taken. Looking out at the harbor, the location where I'm staying is to the right across the harbor.

picture 4: view from behind the main building. One of the "labs" that can be driven across the country, and put on a ship!

picture 5: view from outside the main building, to the left and down is where the docks are.

picture 6: view of the back of the main building, my lab is in the grey building, the white one story is the conference/break room.

picture 7: view from inside Fields lab, where I spend most of my time. Towards the back left is the flume, with the large black cylinder going into it (velocimeter). To the right is the video station, and the computer as well.

Pictures! (with comments to come)







Thursday, June 24, 2010

Diving In

The barnacle adventures are well underway. Yesterday we threw a bunch of barnacles in a jar of water collected from the dock. We gave them 24 hours to eat as much as they wanted, and then today tested the water again using the FlowCAM to see what they ate. A problem we ran into was that the water we had collected had gobs and gobs (a unit of measure only know to Fields lab) of stuff ranging in size from 10-200 microns. So the issue was that we suspect a lot of the larger stuff in the water was eating the smaller stuff which was seen in our control. (So it's inconclusive whether the barnacles ate the small stuff, or if the bigger stuff ate the small stuff) Anyway. I've been processing through a lot of the film I took this week. I filmed the barnacles at temperatures ranging from 75F - 50F and I've been counting how many times they fan their feeding arm to get a feeding rate. It's so remarkable to see their feeding habits change, they love the cold water! crazy! So this weekend will be a lot more processing through the film, and planning the details of the next set of grazing experiments. Wahoo!

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Excuse me, flow?

This is a picture of the flume set-up in the lab. I will re-post a more clear picture when I remember to bring my camera to the lab. The tall black tube sticking up is a velocimeter, which measures the velocity of water flow without interfering with the particles moving through the flow, by triangulating some sort of beam that sends back to the computer. The flume has salt water on the inside chamber, with a turbine to make the water flow. The outside is filled with fresh water that regulates the temperature of the inside part. We hooked up the camera today to film our little barnacles! David, Quincy, Brandon and I all stared mesmerized at the screen watching these little barnacles hold out their appendages to catch some plankton. So cool. Our proposals are due this Friday, so I'm going to get writing!
The next photo is a view from where the camera is mounted, looking onto where the barnacles are.

Sunday, June 13, 2010

Take my breath away

WOW! That is cold water. Seriously. 50 degrees I think. A group of us went to use some kayaks/canoes, and about four strokes away from the dock, our canoe tipped. And we all swam to shore but I literally could not breath. I am just so thankful that we were so close to land!
Tomorrow we all get to present our ideas at our first "Roundtable on Research" discussion. A good way for us to all, informally, find out about what we're researching. This week will be pretty busy with our proposal paper due on Friday! Time to get to work!

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Lobsters, Crabs, and Seals


Today we got up early and drove to the Darling Marine Center, where we boarded the R/V Ira C boat. We cruised through towards the open ocean (but not quite there) and made three stops for oceanographic stations, where we did some typical measurements and sampling. One of the things we did that I haven't done before was a bottom trawl, where (I don't know if I approve of this) we dragged a net on the bottom of the sea for about 10 minutes and brought it up to count everything in it. Among the hardy lobsters and crabs there were also some bottom dwelling fish that probably died. I kept taking some and throwing them back when no one was looking, so if you're reading this and you were the one taking a tally of what we caught.... maybe add on 10 urchins and 5 soft shelled lobsters and at least 10 fish. On the cruise we also saw several little seals just swimming around enjoying the 14degree C water.

Here's a picture from Guatemala. from Manute's camera.

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

I blog, You blog.

Day two at the lab!

We did a lot of brainstorming today, as well as learning some of the general tasks the Fields lab does. We walked through how to autoclave filtered sea water so it can be clean enough to use with cultures. We then went through and learned the careful techniques of transferring the culture stocks to keep them fresh. Along the way we did another tow, and sorted the Acartia from the Tamora (sp?). We also concluded that our first batch died because of the bleach in the water... learning from mistakes!

Tomorrow we're going out on a boat for the day, using a vessel from the Darling lab (sp?) about an hour away. It should be a nice day, and a nice break from land. My new rain boots will come in handy!

That's it for now!

Monday, June 7, 2010

MaineMaineMaineMaine

Hello Ocean!

Well, here I am! Back on the coast. This time though, it's bit north of my science comfort zone. All 11 (12?) of us arrived here in harborfields yesterday, and claimed rooms in either the "1780 House" (5 guys, 4 girls) or the little cottage (3 girls). I'm sharing a room in the 1780 house with two other ladies, and I have yet to find out if the house is actually from the 1780s but judging by the slope and slant and noise of everything, I'd believe it. We hail from all over: Maine, Minnesota (me!), Washington, Texas, Puerto Rico, Colorado, etc. We're still in the slightly awkward/uncomfortable jumping into friendships stage, but I'm hopeful for the future.

This morning we all walked over to the lab, which consists of a main office-type building, a "double-wide" filled with labs, a "triple-wide" filled with labs, a couple docks, a conference room, and a shared library. All of which sits on the harbor that we live across. I'm convinced that it would take me less energy to row boat across each morning instead of walking 15-20 minutes, so we'll see how that goes. We got a formal introduction of all the research scientists (about 10?) who do their thang there at Bigelow, and then after some tours and logistics talk we met with our mentors. My mentor is Dr. David Fields, and I think I'm going to have a great summer with him. His lab is super awesome, even though I have no idea how to find anything in it yet. He has a bunch of really unique equipment, hopefully some of which I'll be using. One of the cool things he does is he videotapes the behavior of things (like plankton, or krill, or anything) in reaction to stimulants. He's even thinking about seeing how they react to oil... which could be really important... like rrrrreally important.

The location is a lot like an up north Minnesota area, except all the water is salty. I thought I saw a leech off the dock today but it was really a little eel. The closest Grand Marais-type town is about a 15 minute drive, and the closest town with a Target/Walgreens is about an hour. A guy working in our lab though is going to let me borrow his bike for the summer. Sweet!

Goodnight for now!