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Vent parasite research featured in Frontline, India’s National Magazine
See full article here.
Read MoreCheck out this cruise video from our recent expedition to vents on the East Pacific Rise!
You can find the link to this short film here and on the National Deep Submergence Facility (NDSF) website.
Read MoreVent parasite project featured in Oceanus magazine
Falling in love with deep-sea parasites
Read MoreResearch cruise RR2102 and the Vent Parasite Project featured in Deep Sea Life
An interdisciplinary team of oceanographers and engineers led by investigators from WHOI, SIO, Rutgers University, Western Washington University, and Lehigh University returned recently from a month-long expedition on R/V Roger Revelle (RR2102) to hydrothermal vents at 9°50’N on the East Pacific Rise. They used deep submergence vehicles AUV Sentry and ROV Jason, paired with shipboard…
Read MoreNew paper published in Ecology
Functional traits provide new insight into recovery and succession at deep-sea hydrothermal vents Lauren N. Dykman, Stace E. Beaulieu, Susan W. Mills, Andrew R. Solow, Lauren S. Mullineaux Investigation of communities in extreme environments with unique conditions has the potential to broaden or challenge existing theory as to how biological communities assemble and change through…
Read MoreNew research paper published: parasites in the California kelp forest food web
Excited to see the project I worked on during undergrad at UCSB finally published! If you are curious how parasites fit into the food web of California Kelp forests, check out this new paper in Nature Scientific Data: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41597-021-00880-4
Read MoreMy research on the life cycles of vent parasites featured in The Atlantic
Life is tough for teenage parasites The Atlantic | by Sabrina Imbler | February 16, 2021 See the full story on The Atlantic website: https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2021/02/deep-sea-parasite-ekes-out-life-hydrothermal-vents/618032/
Read MoreVent parasite research featured in WHOI’s podcast “The Drop”
See link to episode here!
Read MoreNew publication from the Mullineaux Lab and colleagues shows communities at frequently disturbed hydrothermal vents takes longer than a decade to recover.
Read the new publication here!
Read MoreNew blog post published on the WHOI Bio Education page!
Link to blog
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