Oceanic biology is extraordinarily complex because of the diversity of organisms that inhabit the seas, the wide range of environments they inhabit, and the varied and complex ways in which they interact with and contribute to essential global processes. Research in the Biology Department at WHOI encompasses a diversity of organisms, levels of biological organization, and approaches. WHOI biologists study organisms from the smallest scale (marine viruses, bacteria, and archaea) to the largest (whales). Department members address questions ranging from molecular and cellular processes to population structure and ecosystem function. Aspects of oceanic life are investigated using powerful techniques of molecular biology, biochemistry, cell biology, genomics, proteomics, sophisticated acoustic and optical methods, behavior, ocean informatics, and mathematical modeling of molecular processes and population dynamics.

WHOI biologists perform laboratory-based investigations as well as field studies in local Massachusetts and coastal New England waters and at sites around the globe (Polar Regions, Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans; coastal, open water, and deep sea). Special strengths in the department include the ecology and physiology of microbes; bio-optical studies of phytoplankton; advanced optical and acoustic techniques for zooplankton distribution and behavior; the ecology, behavior, development, and genetic history of invertebrates; the behavior and distribution of marine larvae; fish ecology; mathematical analysis and computer modeling of life history, population dynamics and physical-biological interactions; toxicological and molecular biological research on pollution effects and adaptations; and acoustical, anatomical and behavioral studies of marine mammals.

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Unknown - 1.3 KB - MD5: 5b75a003c504d851e5c329a5a4751917
ReadMe file describing data deposit
ATX Archive - 48.1 GB - MD5: cf81b7d21b70862aaec8d1267de0e601
The raw Attune CytPix experiment file that can be read through the Attune cytometric software. The software provides a user interface to visualize the flow cytometry data, images, and settings together.
ZIP Archive - 80.9 MB - MD5: 94b3ac357673a53909cea8365eddb6b0
The flow cytometry files that include the fluorescence and scatter values for all of the triggered events. These have been compressed into a single zip archive containing all the flow cytometry files from the study.
ZIP Archive - 48.3 GB - MD5: 178e3cb05f74202eb7faa1b395eb4ee7
Images of particles that fell within gating strategy. These have been compressed into a single zip archive containing all the image files from the study.
Plain Text - 1.4 KB - MD5: 2fe557bdc6f423bcda0b9e95e32f556a
ReadMe file containing descriptive information about the files in this dataset.
Tabular Data - 586.9 KB - 30 Variables, 2365 Observations - UNF:6:A3dKuAkyNYLCjtT2Ky8Kkg==
Summary statistics of each gate in each sample
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