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What did we catch?

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Hi guys!

Last night we cruised towards our southern transect. We arrived at our first station and began sampling at sunrise (6am). We've hit 10 stations so far today! We collected many of our targeted species and more!

On the boat, we use a camera attached to our microscope to help us take pictures of the tiny fish. Here's some of our catch:

 

 

b2ap3_thumbnail_mahi.jpg

Dolphinfish larva.

 

b2ap3_thumbnail_swordfish_20170703-201349_1.jpg

Swordfish larva.

 

b2ap3_thumbnail_billfish_20170703-201409_1.jpg

Billfish larva.

 

b2ap3_thumbnail_tuna2.jpg

Tuna larva.

 

b2ap3_thumbnail_IC800230_20160610-034611_1.JPG

Frogfish larva.

 

b2ap3_thumbnail_siphonophore.jpg

Alex found a siphonophore.

 

b2ap3_thumbnail_boatTAMUG.jpg

Cori, Travis and Jillian on deck and ready for the next tow! 

All smiles here!

-Nina

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Nina Pruzinsky is a graduate research assistant in Dr. Tracey Sutton's Oceanic Ecology Lab at Nova Southeastern University. She is interested in researching poorly-studied life stages/species/communities. By doing this, her goal is to provide information to conservation and management efforts that can be used to protect and maintain species populations. Nina gets the opportunity to work with fishes throughout the water column; she not only works with deep-sea fishes in Dr. Sutton's lab, but she also studies tuna early life stages in the epipelagic zone for her thesis. Nina's Master's thesis is entitled "Identification and spatiotemporal dynamics of tuna (Family: Scombridae; Tribe: Thunnini) early life stages in the oceanic Gulf of Mexico." This topic allows her to investigate the population dynamics of taxonomically-challenging early life stages of these ecologically, economically and recreationally important fishes.

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