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Notes from the Field

Viewing Posts from August 2009

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    Nathalia Tirado Sánchez

    Editor’s note: A second Spanish-only guest blog, from Gene’s shipmate Nathalia Tirado Sánchez, describes how a family vacation to the tropics when she was five ended up with them staying to live on the Galapagos. At that age, she remembers feeling like she had gone back in time, to a place where dinosaurs (marine iguanas) […]

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    Jerson Moreno

    Editor’s Note. Two of Gene’s shipmates on the Mabel, whom he invited to guest blog, submitted their posts in Spanish, with no translation. Biologist Jerson Moreno is describing the activities he has been involved in since he started working the Galapagos in 1998, most of them involving monitoring small marine animals such as fish and […]

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    Roberto Pépolas: Safety Diving Officer, Logistic support

    My main role within the Charles Darwin Foundation is to be aware of the safety during the field activities in the marine and terrestrial areas. I also participate in the different marine research projects that are going on.  In the ecological Monitoring after seven years of participation; I identify and take notes of the number […]

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    Diego J. Ruiz

    Since 2006, I’ve been an Associate Researcher at Marine Ecosystem Monitoring Program of the Charles Darwin Foundation, and also an Associate Researcher at Nazca Institute of Marine Research since 2003.

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    Mariana Vera

    My name is Mariana Vera, and I’ve been involved in conservation for more than 7 years. Right now I am working as an associate researcher in the marine coastal research area of the Charles Darwin Foundation in Galapagos (Ecuador). As a science diver, my work is centered around ecological monitoring and I specialize in taxonomic […]

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    Life is Much Better, Down Where It’s Wetter, Under the Sea!

    I’ve asked Stuart to write a short description of the scientific background behind the dive program that is at the heart of the research cruise that I have been fortunate enough to participate in and that description can be found at the bottom of this journal entry. However, I wanted to try and graphically illustrate […]

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    Just the Facts Please, Just the Facts

    For those of you who are chronologically oriented, here is a summary of our week at sea aboard the M/V Queen Mabel as she explored the western part of the Galapagos Archipelago. Below is a map showing the complete cruise track with the general areas that we visited outlined and below that are the detailed […]

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    Ocean color research done the old fashioned way – by hand

    In this day of high speed computers, sophisticated satellite observation systems and the continuously connected world in which we do our science, it has been quite a eye opening and muscle straining experience to realize that people still do oceanographic research the old fashioned way — by hand! The ocean waters around the Galapagos teem […]

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