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Mendenhall Postdoctoral Fellow Joins Coral Reef Project
Greg is a recent Ph.D. graduate in ecology from Duke University, where he wrote his dissertation on the physiology of coral feeding. For the past year, Greg has been a postdoctoral fellow at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)'s Center for Coastal Fisheries and Habitat Research in Beaufort, NC, conducting benthic-habitat and coral-recruitment studies in the Dry Tortugas off Florida, and modeling studies to predict recovery of coral-reef systems from vessel-grounding injuries. Greg joins the Coastal and Marine Geology Program's Coral Reef Project to provide expertise on the effects of sediment turbidity on coral productivity. Specifically, Greg will be investigating physiological energetics as an indicator of coral-reef health, with a goal of developing a physiological index (scope for growth) as a tool to evaluate the health and performance of coral-reef systems. Studies in the Coral Reef Project and throughout the Coastal and Marine Geology Program are increasingly multidisciplinary in scope, and Greg will add new breadth to our scientific strengths.
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in this issue:
cover story: Ecologically Sensitive Islands in the Bering Sea Track Florida's Manatees Via Web Site New Map Poster for Falmouth, MA Science Teachers Visit Woods Hole USGS Landsat Images Appear in Textbook Scientists Give "Telelecture" to Louisiana Students USGS Landsat Image Featured at Museum Manheim Lectures in Ireland and Sweden Saltwater Intrusion and Coastal Aquifers Natural Science and Better Health New Chief Scientist for Western Coastal and Marine Team Mendenhall Fellows Lecture in Reston, VA Mendenhall Fellow Joins Coral Reef Project Netherlands Scientist Visits Woods Hole USGS Employees Find Avocation in Blacksmithing |