We use cookies to improve your experience, some are essential for the operation of this site.

Ellie Bors (center) showing undergrads how to use a seine net for sampling.

Ellie Bors (center) showing undergrads how to use a seine net for sampling.
Ellie Bors (center) showing undergrads how to use a seine net for sampling.
Ellie Bors (center) showing undergrads how to use a seine net for sampling.
Ellie Bors (center) showing undergrads how to use a seine net for sampling.
Comments (0)
252467
Kleindinst, Thomas N.
Ellie Bors (center) showing undergrads how to use a seine net for sampling.
Still Image
06/17/2015
graphics/woodneck_beach/_DSC2222.JPG
Stace Beaulieu and Annette Govindarajan led a group of undergraduate Summer Student Fellows and guest students on a tour of beach ecology during a recent field trip to Wood Neck Beach in Falmouth. The goal of the one-hour trek was to introduce young students to local intertidal biodiversity.
Image Of the Day caption:
WHOI Summer Student Fellow, Sara Hamilton, MIT-WHOI Joint Program student Ellie Bors, and WHOI lab assistant Julie Pringle (left to right) collect river herring specimens in a local creek. The fish swim from the ocean up coastal streams to spawn in fresh water each spring. In recent years, however, their populations have plummeted. WHOI biologist Joel Llopiz investigates the factors that affect the growth and survival of herring larvae, about which surprisingly little is known. In particular, he studies otoliths, tiny calcium carbonate deposits in fish heads that add a new growth ring each day, so scientists use them to study how fish develop.
Photo by Tom Kleindinst
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Labels
This item includes these files
Collections