What
is your role in Extreme 2002?
This will be my second hydrothermal vent cruise as a member of Dr. Craig
Carys research group. I will be assisting our research group with
a variety of molecular analyses on the microbes associated with the Alvinella
(Pompeii) worms and vent chimneys.
What
questions are you trying to answer and why?
We
are attempting to gain a more thorough understanding of the microbial
community composition of hydrothermal vents and its interactions with
the unique chemical environment. These organisms have developed methods
to thrive under extreme conditions that were once thought to be lethal
to biological systems. Understanding the biological and chemical interactions
of these extreme environments may provide evidence for the evolution of
early biological systems.
Why
is this research important? What are the benefits?
This
research will provide for a better understanding of the diversity of life
present in the ocean and on the planet. It will expand our knowledge of
the temperature and chemical limitations of life and the mechanisms developed
by organisms to thrive under such conditions. The isolation of enzymes
from vent organisms may prove useful in industrial processes. These systems
have also been theorized to mimic the environmental conditions of early
Earth and have implications into theories into the early evolution of
life on this planet and the possibility of life on other planets.
Whats
your educational background and what lured you into marine research?
II majored in marine science and biology at the University of Georgia.
Through my undergraduate studies and past research experience, I developed
a strong interest in marine microbes and their interactions with the environment.
I am now a graduate student at the University of Delaware College of Marine
Studies.
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