Phytoplankton Ecology in the Monterey Bay

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In a project supported by NOAA’s ECOHAB program, which aims to understand the ecology of harmful algal blooms in the ocean, Lōkahi sailed the bay to probe the populations of microscopic algae – phytoplankton.  The goal of this sailing search was to find areas of Monterey Bay where a certain genus of phytoplankton was blooming.  This wind-powered reconnaissance, in turn, informed where a large collaborative team from MBARI, the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, and Stanford University directed the capabilities of the R/V Rachel Carson. 

The research team will be exploring microbial ecology by integrating observations of the marine environment and its changes with a deep dive into the nature of the phytoplankton community and its activity – using genomics to identify species, transcriptomics to examine their gene expression, and metabolomics to characterize cellular metabolites.

Toxins produced by some harmful algal blooms can be transferred throughout aquatic food webs.1

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This Project

Our Collaborators

Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute

MBARI’s mission is to advance marine science and engineering to understand our changing ocean.

Scripps Institute of Oceanography

Scripps scientists work to understand and protect the planet by investigating our oceans, Earth, and atmosphere to find solutions to our greatest environmental challenges.

Stanford University

  1. Credit: Natalie Renier, WHOI Graphic Services; Anderson et al. 2022. Used under terms of the Creative Commons License ↩︎