Posts by Ann Tarrant
Moving on up
The Antarctic adventure has begun! Right after Christmas, I left my family home in Chicago and headed off to Punta Arenas. The next day, was a whirlwind of orientation meetings, trying on ECW gear (extreme cold weather clothing loaned to cruise participants by the US Antarctic Program), last-minute shopping, and moving onto the ship. After…
Read MoreAdventures at Sea
(this post was written by Ph.D. student Cory Berger) My name is Cory Berger, and I’m a new student in the Tarrant lab. I’m still getting settled in to life as a graduate student, but I’ve already had some memorable experiences, and I’m going to be writing about one of them today. I recently participated…
Read MoreReflecting on Marine Adaptation
Carolyn Tepolt and I will be teaching a new course on Marine Adaptation in Spring 2019! The class will be offered to students in the MIT-WHOI Joint Program as a “Topics Course.” Topics Courses meet once per week and typically provide a mix of lecture and in-depth discussion of primary literature, kind of like a seminar…
Read MorePresenting Dr. Hanny Rivera
Thursday was a special day in our lab. Hanny Rivera successfully defended her Ph.D. thesis titled: Genetic connectivity, Adaptation, and Phenotypic Plasticity of Corals and Anemones under Thermal Stress. Much of Hanny’s work focused on characterizing genetic structure within populations of the massive reef-building coral Porites lobata. In these studies, Hanny collaborated most closely with Anne Cohen…
Read MoreLooking Out for Serendipity
I was recently invited to speak to graduate students from the Cellular and Molecular Biology Program at the University of Michigan. They asked me to provide a broad perspective, speaking not only about my current research but also about the training I received and the path that brought me to where I am now. As…
Read MoreHow copepods thrive on southern cuisine
Mmmm southern cooking… Fried chicken and biscuits, shrimp and grits, crawfish etouffee… I could go on for quite a while. But actually I’m talking about the natural diet of small crustaceans called copepods. And I’m talking farther south…much farther. I was recently awarded funding from the National Science Foundation through the Office of Polar Programs…
Read MoreExpecting the Unexpected
If you do not expect it, you will not find the unexpected, for it is hard to find and difficult. -Heraclitus (quoted within Loren Eiseley’s “The Unexpected Universe”) I have a confession. I often get bored or zone out during academic seminars. Sometimes the topic is outside my field and presented at a technical level…
Read MoreYes, actually I would love to see your goldfish
(above, Venus at her Mirror, East Pacific Rise by Lily Simonson, photo used with permission) A couple weeks ago I had the opportunity to see a presentation by Lily Simonson and to talk with her afterward. Lily is a wonderfully talented artist who has embarked on some spectacular adventures during which she has immersed herself in…
Read MoreFull STEAM Ahead!
I see beauty in nature and even in a well-designed experiment or a cleverly constructed sentence. But I think we all experience that beauty in a different way, and I supposed the level of enthusiasm for experimental design and grammatical elegance is highly variable. I try hard to describe my field of research and share…
Read MorePassing the Torch
Yesterday was the last day in the lab for Falmouth Academy Intern Hannah Stillman and just the second day for Summer Student Fellow David Brinkley. Both of them have contributed or will contribute to our ongoing studies of the sea anemone Nematostella. Hannah helped with animal care and joined us in studies of thermal plasticity and…
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