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Julie Rocho-Levine performing a respirometry on the test dolphin.

Julie Rocho-Levine performing a respirometry on the test dolphin.
Julie Rocho-Levine performing a respirometry on the test dolphin.
Julie Rocho-Levine performing a respirometry on the test dolphin.
Julie Rocho-Levine performing a respirometry on the test dolphin.
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Julie Rocho-Levine performing a respirometry on the test dolphin.
Still Image
10/12/2013
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Researchers from Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) and Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi (TAMUCC) were working with dolphins and their trainers at Dolphin Quest at The Kahala Hotel and Resort in Oahu, Hawaii.
Rocho-Levine works as a trainer for Dolphin Quest.
Image Of the Day caption:
A dolphin provides Courtney Yanovitch a voluntary breath sample using a custom-made device that measures oxygen and CO2 levels and respiratory rate. WHOI biologist Michael Moore and MIT-WHOI graduate student Julie van der Hoop, comparative physiologist Andreas Fahlman of Texas A&M Univ., and Micah Brodsky of VMD Consulting are working with the trained dolphins at Dolphin Quest Oahu to test the effects of drag created by a data-logging device commonly used to track wild dolphin behavior. The dolphins in the study are trained to follow a remote controlled boat while wearing the non-invasive data logger. The breath samples the dolphins provide help quantify their energy exertion while wearing the data logger and without it.
Photo courtesy of Michael Moore
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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