One Last Post

Published on: Author: cswauthor

So, Al and Evelyn and Wendi made all this effort to solicit some retrospective, what-I-learned-from-Chief-Science-Training posts and make sure they were the last things posted on the blog, and then I came in like LOOK AT THE COOL PICTURES and ruined it. So here I am with one last post, which I will begin by… Continue reading

Back in port!

Published on: Author: cswauthor

  After a busy few days of packing up and getting all the gear and samples shipped out to their respective institutions, we are off the ship and on to new adventures!  Stay tuned for a few closing thoughts on the workshop and experiences!

Taking the pulse of ocean microbes

Published on: Author: cswauthor

How fast is the metabolism of a microbe in the ocean? Today, we set up incubations with seawater plankton to study the metabolic rates of marine microorganisms, specifically to look at carbon and nitrogen metabolism. First, we collected seawater in bottles and placed them in our on-deck incubators (to simulate natural light and temperature). Into… Continue reading

Filtering the ocean

Published on: Author: cswauthor

If you walk through the R/V Thompson labs this week, you will hear a familiar humming noise. It’s the sound of pumps pulling and pushing seawater through filters. A number of us are preserving these filters for further analysis in our respective labs. Why would we spend a week out on ocean just to filter… Continue reading

Phytoplankton

Published on: Author: cswauthor

Tiny plants in the ocean called phytoplankton convert carbon dioxide that comes to the ocean from the atmosphere into organic carbon that can be used for energy, just like plants on land. Phytoplankton also require many other things in order to survive including nitrogen, a nutrient they use to make different parts of their cells.… Continue reading

Coring at Sunset

Published on: Author: cswauthor
Sunset Core

4 cores tonight. Here’s the recovery of the first, with the sun setting behind Catalina Island. The sun disappeared behind the island just as we began to extrude the cores. And here I thought I’d get to work in the daylight for once.   Also, a Carnival Cruise ship passed by about an hour ago.… Continue reading