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

Amy Maas wrestling with pump tubing on the foredeck of Tioga.

Amy Maas wrestling with pump tubing on the foredeck of Tioga.
Amy Maas wrestling with pump tubing on the foredeck of Tioga.
Amy Maas wrestling with pump tubing on the foredeck of Tioga.
Amy Maas wrestling with pump tubing on the foredeck of Tioga.
Comments (0)
240103
Wiebe, Peter
Amy Maas wrestling with pump tubing on the foredeck of Tioga.
Still Image
08/28/2013
graphics/Tioga_PW_August2013/DSC_1143_PHW.JPG
Amy Maas a postdoc of Gareth's and Ann Tarrent's and the fellow over to the right is Mike Lowe, a postdoc of Gareth's. The pump is a system that was used in the GLOBEC project on Georges Bank in the 1990's and also in the Gulf of Maine Hab project in the 2000's. This was a test of the pump and indeed it worked fine and pumped lots of water fast.
Image Of the Day caption:
Amy Maas, a postdoc in the labs of WHOI biologists Gareth Lawson and Ann Tarrant, joined fellow postdoc Mike Lowe in testing a plankton pump aboard the R/V Tioga in August 2013. Capable of pumping 80 gallons per minute, the system collects plankton as much as 100 meters below the surfacesamples that help inform biologists about the health and distribution of a vital part of the marine food web. A previous version of the system was used to sample microzooplankton in the Georges Bank GLOBEC Project from 1995 to 1999, as well as the colonial cyanobacterium Trichodesmium in the North Atlantic, and to look for evidence of harmful algal blooms in the Gulf of Maine.
Photo by Peter Wiebe
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Labels
This item includes these files
Collections