Showing posts with label SkIO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SkIO. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 5, 2025

tina tuesday at skio!

 
It was a dark and stormy night - as Snoopy would have written! 
Still, I had braved the weather for this special presentation at the Skidaway Institute of Oceanography, as did a few other stalwart souls.
Good for us!
There were four researchers who participated in the "Open Lab Night", though I only had time to visit three of them.
I might have been able to see all four, as well as tour the Research Vessel Savannah, but I took the time to ask questions about the science going on out there.
It's amazing!!!
Remember, I once thought I would go to college for marine science?
Well, I had no idea fifty years ago of the many different aspects of that field!
As per the advice of Jackson when I arrived, I started in Building 2, which had two Open Labs.
The first was the Bio-Optics and Satellite Oceanography Lab of Dr. Sara Rivero-Calle, right inside the building entrance.
How very fortunate for me!!!
See that device she's holding?
That's the Cubesat known as SeaHawk-1, which was in a low-Earth orbit from 2018 until 2023, gathering eighteen images a day as it swept around the planet taking color photos of 200 km x 700 km swaths of the oceans.
WOW.
But here's the fascinating part of all that.
She's building a spectral data bank of the types of phytoplankton out there, much as organic chemists have for identifying proteins, lipids, and carbohydrate molecules.
WOW.
Right now, they're in the data analysis mode for all the images SeaHawk-1 sent back during its five years in orbit.
That will certainly occupy her crew for quite a while!
Then I was down the hall and around the corners to the office of the newest member there, Dr. Nicholas Foukal.
His work is more physics-based, concentrating on the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, aka AMOC.
Basically, he's studying the effect of ice melt off Greenland on the salinity and density of the water mixing with the Gulf Stream as it loops back down toward northern Europe.
WOW. 
The only things in his office are pictures of Greenland, where he will be going at the end of the month, to spend September doing measurements and calculations, as physicists do.
Basically, he's trying to sort out whether the British Isles are headed for an ice age, given the decreases in sea temperature caused by climate change.
WOW.
By the way, he liked my little flip phone.
(smile!)
So far, I'd spent over an hour in this one building.
That left me about 30 minutes to speak with one other, so over to Building 17.
Dr. Marc Frischer does the kind of research I always think of with marine science: the study of microbial activity on actual marine animals in the ocean.
Namely, his work is with shrimp and the Black Gill disease they get from a ciliate fungus called Fusurium solani, one similar to the ciliate that causes ich in aquariums, as I discovered when I asked him about it.
WOW.
Just like with that disease, there is a treatment that can be used to rid small batches of shrimp of the fungi, to allow them to have a 'control' group for their studies.
That's the only way to get shrimp without Black Gill, as 70-100% have the disease at this time of year.
WOW.
The disease is not harmful to humans, except in as much as it affects the livelihood of local shrimpers, which is serious, considering that Black Gill causes the shrimp to die of suffocation, essentially.
He mentioned that shrimp have a similar ciliate that attaches to their gills, but it doesn't eat its way down into their circulatory system.
I asked if there was a way to saturate the water with that ciliate, as it goes for the same 'receptor' site, so to speak, but he said those two ciliates are often both found on the same shrimp, as they are not competitive.
Drats... but that certainly was a lively conversation!
I'm glad I got the chance to pull out some biochemistry.
(smile!
Plus, I was there almost 40 minutes.
Those of us still there actually got kicked out, as we were past the designated time limit for the Open Lab Night.
What a great place to get kicked out of!
(smile!

Tuesday, June 24, 2025

another summer's eve at skidaway!

 
"You were at Skidaway Institute of Oceanography again? Most excellent for a Tina Tuesday! What was the topic this time?"
This was a history lesson, given by Dr. Herb Windom, the first person hired for the fledging site back in 1967. I think my favorite point in the talk was the one with the photo of the North Atlantic Bight, color-coded for water temperature. That made for a very nice tie-in to the OHM talk a few months ago. I think I impressed him that I knew about the five rivers feeding into that site. (smile!) Right place, right time for me!
 
"Very cool! Did you say 1967? That means Skidaway Institute is the same age as Dood!"
 
That's true! Jackson, the young man in charge of this public outreach activity, had sent the email invite to me twice, so I knew I had to be there. Then, once the talk started, I understood why. I know what it's like to be the first one hired at a site, the lack of organization and the need for changes almost daily. That's how it was when I was stationed at Galeta Island in Panama, when I was the first woman ever to be there. That meant there was only the one bathroom in the building. We had to put a sign on the door that let folks know when there was a woman aboard!
 
"I remember those days! Wow, that was so long ago, g'friend."
 
Yes, I got to Panama in April of 1978. So very long ago!
 
"Herb didn't run into any issues like that, though. Right?"
 
Correct. Only men were out there at SkIO then, but the buildings were prefab and the boat for research held only three or four people. It took a while to get funding so they could get a bigger boat - marine research joke alert! - but the one they now have lets six or seven researchers and equipment go out on the ocean, with a full crew, too. Overall, "The History And Early Days Of Skidaway Institute" was a lovely trip down the memory lane of the retired professor. He kept it light and casual, much like my lectures were when I was teaching. I highly recommend viewing his talk!
 
"Thanks, I'll do that sometime, but not right now. Bounce had "The Long Kiss Goodnight" on earlier and I recorded it. I love that movie with Geena Davis and Samuel L. Jackson! What an excellent flick!"
 
Most def it is! You go ahead and enjoy that. It'll be nice to be able to fast-forward through all the 'mercials!!! I'll catch you on the flip side!