Thursday, September 29, 2011

RI intertidalling

This weekend was the first weekend of the semester that I wasn't in Nahant, which was a bit of a relief. I really love being in Nahant and doing research there, but constantly traveling and doing homework on the train/in the lab is a little tiring. Nevertheless, I still got to go out into the field over part of the weekend to help set up an algal transplant experiment in Little Compton, RI.

Field site in Little Compton. I love how you can see the diversity of reds, greens and browns from a distance here.

Intertidal cormorants!

 Kylla's been setting up reciprocal transplants of Fucus vesiculosus (which Wikipedia says is the 'bladder wrack' - I don't know the common names for any algae!) from the low and high limits of its intertidal range, at sites spanning ~500 m of New England coastline to figure out if low and high zone Fucus show different survival rates and nutrient uptake, and if the patterns vary geographically. This weekend we set up the transplant for one 'south of the Cape' site in RI.

This means abducting the algae and re-attaching them either to the same tide height or the other end of their range over the course of 2 days' fieldwork. We have (bright! coloured!) cable ties around the algae to act as anchors into the z-spar on the rock. There are also temperature loggers deployed at the low and high tide height to monitor temperatures experienced by the transplanted Fucus.

Scuba Smurf helped out too. Here he is with the numbered setup and Fucus transplanted to the high zone!

Scuba Smurf with the little PVC hut that holds the temperature logger. 

Yay for interspecific variation!!

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Return of the petri dishes

So far this semester has been: 2.5 days Brown - 4 days Nahant - 3 days Brown - 4 days Nahant. Last Friday-Monday I was back up there running a full isopod herbivory experiment. Basically, the trial we ran the week before showed that isopods might actually graze enough to be important, so we should look at their grazing patterns in greater detail.

 Multiple-choice petri dish setup: we have 6 species in there. You can just see an isopod in front of the rubber band on the far chamber.

 
70 petri dishes, 210 isopods, 63 grams of freshly collected algae.

Here we go again...

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Unfolding the Earth

I'm currently taking an introductory class on working with spatial data using ArcGIS. We've been discussing the use of different coordinate systems and their components this week, including the various projections used in projection coordinate systems.

This is a video of some of the many ways you can unfold the Earth into a flat map...

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Old field romping

We're into the second week of Fall classes so things should be settling down somewhat. Yay for classes that have a field trip the second week. And yay for classes that make small sotongs and their marine friends do terrestrial fieldwork.

Yesterday we drove about 45 minutes from Providence and sampled old field communities in Glocester, RI for an experimental design class. I'm always slightly surprised by how big the quadrats for terrestrial work are...I'm not sure if this is a general pattern. We quantified white pine abundances at different distances from the forest edge, and milkweed abundances on 10 x 10 m grids.

Old field with goldenrod and milkweed, and the forest edge in the background.

Counting milkweed in a square metre quadrat on a 10 x 10 grid.

Also, everything was remarkably clean, i.e. there was nothing wet or slimy or particularly smelly. I guess everything is weather-dependent (we got a tiny bit of rain) but still, nothing comparable to algae-covered butt.

Scuba Smurf came along too. Somewhat out of his element, but he quickly made friends with the milkweed.

Saturday, September 10, 2011

More fun with herbivory

School started on Wednesday, which means that I had to leave Nahant and go back to Providence and actually sit in classes. My classes this Fall are fairly interesting - Conservation Biology, Methods of Applied Math, an Introduction to GIS - plus I'm auditing an experimental design class. Still, interesting classes are less exciting than actual research, especially actual research that still needs to be done. I have a very nice 3-day class schedule (Tues-Thurs) so Friday found me right back at the Marine Science Center working, again.

This summer I ran a big herbivory experiment looking at Lacuna snail preferences among different species of subtidal algae. This weekend I'm trying to figure out if other herbivores like isopods may also be important in grazing the algae.

The baltic isopod, Idotea balthica. This is a fairly large individual; the ones we find in our algae are generally around 1 cm in length.

To do this we're running a much smaller-scale pilot experiment with just a couple of algal species and only 6 replicates each. The isopods go in little modified petri dishes with a similar structural theme to the containers I used for the Lacuna experiment - identical amounts of algae in both chambers of the dish, herbivores in one chamber.

One of my petri dishes. The right chamber has herbivores; you can just see an isopod at the top-right of the tag number 08. The left chamber is herbivore-free to account for loss/gain of mass that is not due to herbivory.

The overall setup. Petri dishes are zip-tied down to the aqua mesh to keep them submerged. You can see that they are arranged nonrandomly because my arms are short and I can't reach the area in the middle right of the water table. They are interspersed, though...

Scuba Smurf did a dive to check that everything was well attached and working.
Scuba Smurf approves of this experimental setup.

Friday, September 9, 2011

Introducing...Scuba Smurf!

Today I got a new dive buddy: Scuba Smurf.

Scuba Smurf was a gift from my five-year-old friend Caden. He is all decked out in his flashy dive gear, complete with octopus, power inflator and dive gauge/computer. Scuba Smurf is going to have great adventures, but first he needs a check-out dive in the lab touch tank...

Scuba Smurf meets our resident blue lobster (newly moulted!!)

You can follow the adventures of Scuba Smurf here, on his photo album.