With funding from the Mid-Atlantic Fisheries Management Council we will be working with state surveys in MA, NY and NJ as well as a contractor to sample both Spisula subspecies and use genetic markers to quantify patterns of gene flow within subspecies and identify hybrids between them.
Category: Uncategorized
Oyster larvae stay close to home
2018 oyster settlement counts show that the only known reproductive population in the Hudson River is not spreading its reproductive bounty very far downstream. These 2018 results are from a collaboration with Mike McCann at The Nature Conservancy and Liz Burmester with the Billion Oyster Project. Thanks to Kaili Gregory, Adam High, Harmony Borchardt-Wier, Tatiana Castro, the citizen scientists who contributed to spat counting, and to site hosts who graciously provided space for and security of experimental outplants of oysters and shell. Funding was provided by the New York State Water Resources Institute at Cornell University.
Oysters thriving in Hudson River
Congrats to Katie McFarland for her new PLoS ONE paper: https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0207368#pone-0207368-g006
Hare Lab recruiting PhD student
interested in using genetic/genomic approaches to measure and understand adaptive capacity of populations for application in fisheries management and population restoration contexts. Apply to the Natural Resources graduate field, Dec. 1 deadline.
Hare Lab recruiting postdoc
Looking for a postdoc with diverse skills to lead genomic aspects of an NSF-funded project to identify and spatially map balanced polymorphisms underlying oyster tolerance to low salinity. http://evol.mcmaster.ca/~brian/evoldir/PostDocs/Cornell.EcolEvolutionaryGenomics
Hare Lab oyster experiments highlighted in Boating on the Hudson magazine
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See article with picture of giant NYC oyster:
https://www.boatingonthehudson.com/flippingbook/2018/sep-oct/Articles/04TheWonderfulOyster.pdf
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Common ground among NYC oyster restoration stakeholders
Congrats to Jason Holley (McComas PhD student, Dept. Communication) for his paper in Marine Policy: Troubled Waters: Risk Perception and the Case of Oyster Restoration in the Closed Waters of the Hudson-Raritan Estuary. ACSF-funded survey discovers that urban oyster restoration risk/benefit perceptions do not align with stakeholder affiliation.
Hare Lab Website – New & Improved
Many thanks to Diana Bryant!