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Kara Dodge and Amy Kukulya zero in on the target sea turtle.

Kara Dodge and Amy Kukulya zero in on the target sea turtle.
Kara Dodge and Amy Kukulya zero in on the target sea turtle.
Kara Dodge and Amy Kukulya zero in on the target sea turtle.
Kara Dodge and Amy Kukulya zero in on the target sea turtle.
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424190
Kostel, Kenneth
Kara Dodge and Amy Kukulya zero in on the target sea turtle.
Still Image
09/17/2016
graphics/TurtleCam/_N806488.JPG
These images were taken while working under NMFS Permit No. 15672-02.
Caption from Oceanus magazine, Vol. 52, No. 2, pg. 19:
Kara Dodge and Amy Kukulya (inset) keep watch for sea turtles. Finding turtles isn't easy, because they present such a low profile on the water and spend a short time at the surface.
Image Of the Day caption:
WHOI post-doctoral investigator Kara Dodge (left) and engineer Amy Kukulya made a series of trips this fall to track and film sea turtles using technology based on the SharkCam system developed by Kukulya and colleagues at the Oceanographic Systems Lab. Their efforts resulted in data that Dodge hopes will help her better understand the challenges sea turtles face in waters around Cape Cod where they come to feed each year. February 11 is International Women and Girls in Science Day, an opportunity to recognize the critical role women and girls play in scientific advancement and technological development worldwideand for WHOI to acknowledge at home and in the ocean.
Photo by Ken Kostel
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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