Wednesday, March 31, 2010
Heading to Hikurangi - Voyage Information
To find out about the voyage I am going on and to read the daily ship to shore logs click here.
Tuesday, March 30, 2010
Where I work
Today I took some photos of the labs and collection where I am working at NIWA. Some of these photos will be used on the NIWA Invertebrate Collection website that I am developing.
This shows the shelves where the jars of invertebrates are kept. They are arranged by phylum and then genus and species. I am getting the hang of finding where things are.
At the entrance to the collection is a selection of the different types of invertebrates in the collection. Last week when the Wellington cluster group of Teacher Fellows came to visit they were really interested in looking at all the strange things.
At the back of this lab there is a fume hood that you can use when working with ethanol or formalin. It sucks out the nasty vapours.
One of the labs. You can see the microscope that scientists use to have a closer look at the specimens so they can identify them.
This is the bench where we work with dry or frozen samples.
Sadie has gone into the -20 degrees freezer to collect a box of frozen samples. She had to put on a big, thick freezer jacket because it is so cold in there.
The busy main lab. You can see Maz, Dean and Sadie hard at work!
This shows the shelves where the jars of invertebrates are kept. They are arranged by phylum and then genus and species. I am getting the hang of finding where things are.
At the entrance to the collection is a selection of the different types of invertebrates in the collection. Last week when the Wellington cluster group of Teacher Fellows came to visit they were really interested in looking at all the strange things.
At the back of this lab there is a fume hood that you can use when working with ethanol or formalin. It sucks out the nasty vapours.
One of the labs. You can see the microscope that scientists use to have a closer look at the specimens so they can identify them.
This is the bench where we work with dry or frozen samples.
Sadie has gone into the -20 degrees freezer to collect a box of frozen samples. She had to put on a big, thick freezer jacket because it is so cold in there.
The busy main lab. You can see Maz, Dean and Sadie hard at work!
Friday, March 26, 2010
The Countdown Begins
It is getting closer to the time when I will be part of a scientific voyage on the research ship Tangaroa.
The aim of the voyage is to find out about the diversity of marine life at different sites under the ocean - sea mounts, seeps, vents and canyons.
A range of different methods will be used such as trawling, core samples and underwater photography.
I will be involved with collecting the marine creatures, cleaning and preserving them and recording them on the database. I am not sure that I will be able to identify them so will leave that part up to the real scientists.
So far to get ready for the voyage I have been helping with getting all the gear ready that we need because once at sea we can't just pop to the shops to get what we forgot. There is so much gear that we need including safety gear, jars for specimens, gloves, ethanol for preserving the creatures, special paper , computers, cameras, bins and buckets ... the list is endless.
While I am on the boat I am in charge of writing the daily Ship to Shore logs to explain what we are doing. These will be posted on the internet so I will put the link here when I know it.
Playing with Paua
Maz, Barb and I spent a day out at the NIWA Aquaculture facility at Mahanga Bay working with Graeme Moss on the paua project. The scientists are researching how best to farm paua so they breed lots of families from different parents to determine the fasted growing and those that grow the biggest.
Each paua needs to be tagged so it can be identified to the parents that it came from.
Our job was to help put on their second tag, measure and weigh them and then enter this information on the database.
Putting on the tag was a bit tricky as it was a tiny spring that needed to be hooked onto the edge of the shell. As the shell grows it grows over the spring and keeps it in place.
The paua were really cool and some stuck pretty hard to your hand. The naughty ones tried to escape by flipping over onto their foot so we had to flick them back over onto their shells until we had finished with them.
I also learnt how to tell if a paua is male or female - if you look under the foot for the gonad you will see that the male's is creamy white and the female's is a shiny green colour.
Monday, March 22, 2010
The Portobello Marine Centre
Paua Aquaculture at Mahanga Bay
A few weeks ago I visited the aquaculture centre at Mahanga Bay in Wellington. One of their projects is to research the best method and types of paua to use for farming. The paua are grown in tanks and are fed either seaweed or pellets. The buckets tip water over them every 30 seconds or so to simulate the wave action that they would get in the ocean. This allows them to get oxygen. The small yellow tags are attached to the paua so that they can be traced.
I was amazed at the beautiful blue colour the outside of the shells had.
Thursday, March 4, 2010
Classification System
I knew that there was a classification system for naming and grouping living things but since being at NIWA I have discovered a bit more about it. Each day I am dealing with the strange scientific names that are given to creatures. There are lots of rules associated with how names are given. The picture above shows the levels of the classification system. I could never remember the order but found this saying to help me : King Phillip Came Over From Great Spain. (Starting at the bottom this means - Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus, Species)
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