One of the delightful things about being a marine biologist is schmoozing with your friends and peers a few times each year at national conferences.
I just returned today from the 2010 Benthic Ecology Meeting in Wilmington, NC, where 500 geeks like me presented their latest research on benthic (sea-bottom) life. Most of the presentations were 12-minute talks given to a lecture-hall audience, or posters that you could visit and discuss during evening mixers. I did a talk titled "Do Marine Reserves Affect Seagrass, An Experiment in Florida", which was based on a project I did last summer. A couple slides from the talk are below to give an idea of what it was like. If you want to know more about my research, you can visit my professional page from the link in my blogger profile.
In addition to the usual talks and posters, this year's BEM included a film festival with creative offerings by marine biologists and amateur filmmakers. Some were serious documentaries about science or environmental issues, while others, such as "What Invert[ebrate] You Like", by San Diego State University professor Jeremy Long, were more musical and comedic in nature. It helps to be a marine biologist to appreciate some of the references and inside jokes in this one, but anyway...
Wednesday 12 18 24 morning call
7 hours ago
3 comments:
Cool. In the marine organism slide does each thing eat the thing the arrow from it points to? What does the double ended red arrow mean?
Hey Dad- Yep, it's what they call a "food web" or an "interaction web". The black arrows point from each animal to the things it eats, and the double-ended red arrow between algae and seagrass indicates that they are in competition. If the algae gets overgrown, like if there's nothing there to eat it, it will smother the seagrass.
Cool -- I like reading about your research too. You could post more stuff on line where we can see it. "What Invert You Like" was fun, too.
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