Expeditions

In the spirit of curiosity, we seek to explore the world. With much of the world’s oceans still unknown we embark on a journey to discover new organisms and learn more about various biological systems that exist but not really well understood. We build new tools in the lab that allow us to study their mechanical behaviors both in lab cultured media and in situ. Tools such as Planktoscope allow us to quickly catalog the many species that exist in the water in a high-throughput manner —capable of producing a taxonomic demographics at various water depths, geographic location, and climatic conditions. While many research have looked at environmental patterns from a birds-eye-view, we shift our perspective down into the waters to understand the climatic changes from a bottom-up approach. Furthermore, the Gravity Machine and horizontal tracking microscopes allow us to study the mechanical behaviors of these organisms and biological systems under different conditions to better assess how ocean sequesters carbon. Here, we share some of our oceanic field expeditions.


Number of expeditions:

17+

Number of field sites:

10+

Number of new species:

20+


Map

Upcoming Expedition:

TBD

Backdrop map: Mathew Carey, A Map of the World from the best Authorities (c.1800)

  • "We know what the surface of the moon is better than we know what the surface of the sea floor is."

    James Gardner

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Global Sites

Local Sites

Field sites allow for sample collection, needs finding, tool testing and deployment. The lab visits field sites at the Jasper Ridge Biological Preserve (Stanford, CA), Baylands Nature Preserve (Palo Alto, CA), Hopkins Marine Station (Monterey, CA) and Klatte Ranch (Petaluma, CA).

Hopkins Marine Station

Baylands Nature Preserve

Jasper Ridge Biological Preserve

Klatte Ranch