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Kirstin Meyer working at a microscope in the lab.

Kirstin Meyer working at a microscope in the lab.
Kirstin Meyer working at a microscope in the lab.
Kirstin Meyer working at a microscope in the lab.
Kirstin Meyer working at a microscope in the lab.
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305375
LaCapra, Véronique
Kirstin Meyer working at a microscope in the lab.
Still Image
08/02/2017
graphics/Kirstin_Meyer/VCL_3544.JPG
Post-doctoral scholar Kirstin Meyer is studying subtidal succession in fouling communities in Woods Hole, and working in the lab of Lauren Mullineaux.
Image Of the Day caption:
This summer, WHOI postdoctoral scholar Kirstin Meyer hung plastic panels off the WHOI pier and a dock at Eel Pond in Woods Hole, to learn what organisms would settle on them, and how that fouling community would change over time. As part of the experiment, she removed certain organisms from some panels to see what would grow in their absence. Each week, Meyer took panels back to the lab to tally what she found and the order that they settled. Her preliminary results suggest that both water temperature and competition play a key role in driving community composition.
Photo by Véronique LaCapra
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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