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

Mike Brosnahan working from a raft outfitted with an Imaging FlowCytobot.

Mike Brosnahan working from a raft outfitted with an Imaging FlowCytobot.
Mike Brosnahan working from a raft outfitted with an Imaging FlowCytobot.
Mike Brosnahan working from a raft outfitted with an Imaging FlowCytobot.
Mike Brosnahan working from a raft outfitted with an Imaging FlowCytobot.
Geolocation data
(41°50′7″N, 69°58′16″W)
Comments (0)
239295
Unattributed
Mike Brosnahan working from a raft outfitted with an Imaging FlowCytobot.
Still Image
04/25/2014
graphics/fischer/IMG_1953.JPG
Image Of the Day caption:
Post-doctoral investigator Mike Brosnahan worked from a raft that supported an Imaging FlowCytobot (IFCB) on a frigid March day in Nauset Marsh in Orleans, Mass. The IFCB continuously records microscope images of phytoplankton, including the dinoflagellate Alexandrium fundyense, a species that causes paralytic shellfish poisoning. The raft was equipped with power and a wireless Internet connection to run the IFCB, several other computers, and a winch to measure water temperature, salinity, chlorophyll concentration and light. From it, he can monitor the measurements in real-time on his smart phone or laptop, and can notify local and state shellfish wardens if he sees a bloom developing in the marsh.
Photo courtesy of Alexis Fischer
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Labels
This item includes these files
Collections