Monterey Bay is subject to seasonal dinoflagellate blooms, many of which are harmful. These blooms were so dominant during 2004 - 2007 that this period was called the “age of dinoflagellates.†From mid-2017 through 2019, a diversity of dinoflagellates returned to dominate the phytoplankton biomass.To quantify bloom development at high ...
Where: Moss LandingCost: Free
CITRIS Research Exchange: Why are there Brakes on a Car?Drawing from examples from a career in regulated industries like operational healthcare, finance and government, this talk will focus on how controls, discipline, and boundaries in tech aren't just good for privacy and security - they can actually help us move fast.Speaker: Jutta Williams, Facebook
Daniel Ducat is an assistant professor in the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. His lab is interested in using engineering and synthetic approaches to examine the biology and biotechnological application of these intriguing bacteria. He earned his Ph.D. in Molecular and Cell Biology at Johns Hopkins University.
'The Pollinators'Thousands of semi-trailers crisscross the country in the dead of night delivering goods through the darkness to stores, warehouses and factories nationwide. But some of them carry an unsuspected and highly unusual cargo. Honey bees. Tens of billions of them are transported back and forth from one end of the ...
Climate change requires urgent action. Regular tracking of the actions by the various actors is necessary to evaluate how far the world is progressing to meet the goals of the Paris Agreement on climate change to hold global average temperature increase well below 2°C and to make efforts to hold ...
Where: BerkeleyCost: Free
Why Cannabis? Why CBD? Why Now?Join two leading experts in the field for presentations on the changing cultural landscape around cannabis and CBD. Presentations will be followed by a moderated discussion and Q&A led by Eric Siegel.Speakers: Dr. Josh Meisel, Humboldt State University; Martin Lee, Project CBD