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Annette Hynes on R/V Kilo Moana with a Trichodesmium bloom in the background water.

Annette Hynes on R/V Kilo Moana with a Trichodesmium bloom in the background water.
Annette Hynes on R/V Kilo Moana with a Trichodesmium bloom in the background water.
Annette Hynes on R/V Kilo Moana with a Trichodesmium bloom in the background water.
Annette Hynes on R/V Kilo Moana with a Trichodesmium bloom in the background water.
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Ohnemus, Dan
Annette Hynes on R/V Kilo Moana with a Trichodesmium bloom in the background water.
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05/11/2005
Hynes6_bloom_nette_C.jpg
Caption from Oceanus magazine, Vol. 47, No. 1, Pg. 39:
Annette Hynes started her career as a microbial ecologist at a tender age. As a preschooler, she collected alfalfa and crabapples and fermented them in a large ceramic pot to stink out her parents and three sisters: Jeannette, Lynnette, and Raennette. Growing up in Oshkosh, Neb., she was fascinated by tornadoes, milkweed parachutes, and grasshoppers. She got her B.S. in biological sciences and mathematics and a teaching certificate at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln in 1998. She taught math and science in New Jersey and Kenya before coming to the MIT-WHOI Joint Program in 2003. Working with WHOI scientists Scott Doney and John Waterbury in biological oceanography, Hynes is interested in combining culturing, field, and ecological modeling techniques to answer questions about phytoplankton ecology and biogeography. When she’s not popping cells or wrestling with her computer, she enjoys climbing, crocheting, and curling.
Photo by Dan Ohnemus
Copyright © Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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