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Amy Apprill working at a larval settlement experiment site.

Amy Apprill working at a larval settlement experiment site.
Amy Apprill working at a larval settlement experiment site.
Amy Apprill working at a larval settlement experiment site.
Amy Apprill working at a larval settlement experiment site.
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466212
Caiger, Paul
Amy Apprill working at a larval settlement experiment site.
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04/18/2006
SCUBA2.jpg
Caption from Oceanus magazine, Vol. 56, No. 2, Pg. 24:
Marine ecologist Amy Apprill deploys an underwater listening device, or single-channel hydrophone, to analyze the soundscape of a reef in the U.S. Virgin Islands.
Image Of the Day caption:
WHOI coral reef ecologist Amy Apprill tends to a hydrophone setup used as part of an experiment in the U.S. Virgin Islands to study how free-swimming coral larvae pick the location where they will settle for life. The team of researchers, including WHOI biologists Aran Mooney and Joel Llopiz, found that the soundscape of a reefthe combined sounds of all animals living nearbymight play a major role in steering corals towards healthy reef systems and away from damaged ones.
Photo by Paul Caiger
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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