The University of Georgia
The University of Georgia About Us Directory Contact us Search Make a Donation Home
About Us
Programs
Students
Faculty and Staff
Research
Programs
Teacher Resources
Media
About Us

> Seminar Schedule
> News & Events
> Campus Map
> Contact Us


News & Events

> Seminar Schedule

> News & Events Archive

Date News Item
Feb.
2008
Versatile Bacteria in the Coastal Ocean
Research led by scientists in the Department of Marine Sciences and published in the journal Nature shows that the roles played by coastal bacteria in carbon cycling aren’t nearly as specific as previously suspected. Their work reveals how various genes important in the marine carbon cycle are packaged together into bacterial cells, and help efforts to predict how those genes will be affected in a changing ocean. For more information see the article by Dr. Xiaozhen Mou, Shulei Sun, Dr. Robert Hodson, and Dr. Mary Ann Moran at: http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/
nature06513.html
Jan.
2008
Dr. Burd will be returning to Antarctica to help teach the 2008 NSF International Graduate Training Course in Antarctic Biology. This course is sponsored by the US National Science Foundation and allows the students to gain experience working in Antarctica and to learn about the issues and problems of conducting research in such an extreme environment. A web-log following the progress of the course can be found at http://www-modeling.marsci.uga.edu/~adrian
Dec.
2007
Dr. Patricia Yager and graduate student Kevin Bakker are on board the Icebreaker Oden doing research in the Southern Ocean travelling from Punta Arenas, Chili to McMurdo Station, Antarctica. Their expedition is documented by teacher Ms Garay at http://www.polartrec.com/oden-antarctic-expedition-07/
Dec.
2007
Congratulations to Christopher Burbage (PhD, Dr. Binder), Randolph Culp (PhD, Dr. Noakes), Jenny Fisher (PhD, Dr. Hollibaugh), Justin Hartmann (MS, Dr. Cai), Justine Lyons (PhD, Dr. Alber), Melissa Pirchio (MS, Dr. Burd), Jennie Seay (MS, Drs. Alber and Tilburg) and Qi Ye (PhD, Dr. Zhang) for completion of their advanced degrees in December 2007.
Sept.
2007
Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) is supplied to the South Atlantic Bight via the highly productive and extensive coastal salt marshes as a non-point source flux rather than from river input.  As a result, Dr. Bill Miller is developing optical algorithms to link DOC with ocean color for use as a tool to evaluate the spatial and temporal contributions of these sources of DOC. The study, funded by Georgia Sea Grant, will include experiments with moored optical instruments together with water and optical samples along the nearshore in order to refine ocean color estimates of DOC and add to our understanding of coastal carbon budgets.
Sept.
2007
Dr. Sarah Cooley (a recent Marine Science graduate) together with Dr. Patricia Yager and colleagues have found that nitrogen-fixing bacteria growing in the low-salinity Amazon River plume waters are found to absorb significant amounts of CO2 from the atmosphere - which comes as a surprise in a region thought to emit CO2 to the atmosphere.  This finding is a research highlight featured with Nature Geoscience.
Sept.
2007
Dr. Mary Ann Moran, with collaborators Drs. William Whitman (UGA Microbiology Department) and Ronald Kiene (University of South Alabama), have a new grant from the National Science Foundation to study the marine sulfur cycle. The project takes a functional genomics approach to uncover bacterial roles in sulfur cycling in ocean surface waters, focusing on how bacteria affect the exchange of volatile sulfur across the ocean/atmosphere boundary.  Students and post docs from the Moran, Whitman, and Kiene labs will make use of water samples from the Gulf of Mexico.

August
2007
Congratulations to Weidong Zhao for winning one of the best poster awards at the Gordon Research Conference titled Archaea: Ecology Metabolism & Molecular Biology.  Weidong's work with Dr. Chunluan Zhang and colleagues shows that ammonia monooxygenase subunit A (amoA), a key enzyme of ammonia oxidation that was recovered from Kamchatka hot spring mats with temperature range of 42 to 85 (degree)C, is phylogenetically distinct from amoA genes found in marine and soil environments, suggesting that nitrification may play an important role in elevated temperature environments.
August
2007
Congratulations to Katherine Doyle (MS with Dr. Di Iorio) and Adair Johnson (MS with Dr. Miller) for completion of their advanced degrees in August 2007. Theses and dissertations can be viewed from the UGA electronic library.
May
2007
Congratulations to Stephen Carini (PhD with Dr. Joye), Beth Orcutt (PhD with Dr. Joye) and Jacob Shalack (MS with Dr. Walker) for completion of their advanced degrees in May 2007. Theses and dissertations can be viewed from the UGA electronic library.
Feb.
2007
Congratulations to Li-Qing Jiang, a graduate student in chemical oceanography, for winning the Outstanding Student Poster Award at the American Society for Limnologists and Oceanographers 2007 Aquatic Sciences Meeting in Santa Fe, NM. His presentation was title "CO2 study on a marsh-dominated shallow continental shelf: Is the South Atlantic Bight a source of CO2 to the atmosphere?".
Feb.
2007
Dr. Ji Hong Dai (a recent Marine Science graduate) has received the John A. Knauss Marine Policy Fellowship awarded by the National Sea Grant office of NOAA.  She will work at the NOAA Fisheries Office of Science and Technology at NOAA Fisheries Service in Silver Spring, MD, which is the primary interface between NOAA Fisheries scientific activity and other national and international organizations. Her interests are to link science and policy and to work on the development and implementation of the Integrated Ocean Observing System (IOOS) and the international Global Earth Observation System of Systems (GEOSS) efforts.

Top

Franklin College of Arts and Sciences Website Contact University of Georgia • Athens, Georgia 30602 • USA • (706) 542-7671