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Katie Pitz snorkeling to collect specimens of dead coral rubble.

Katie Pitz snorkeling to collect specimens of dead coral rubble.
Katie Pitz snorkeling to collect specimens of dead coral rubble.
Katie Pitz snorkeling to collect specimens of dead coral rubble.
Katie Pitz snorkeling to collect specimens of dead coral rubble.
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246874
Moulton, Melissa
Katie Pitz snorkeling to collect specimens of dead coral rubble.
Still Image
01/16/2013
graphics/Oceanus_online/Pitz/P1160102_B.jpg
Caption from Oceanus magazine, Vol. 51, No. 2, pg. 63:
Katie Pitz collects specimens of dead coral rubble that harbor the toxic phytoplankton Gambierdiscus. She is investigating many facets of Gambierdiscus in an effort to combat the serious food-borne illness they inflict on people.
Caption from Oceanus online:
Katie Pitz collects specimens of dead coral rubble that harbor the toxic phytoplankton Gambierdiscus. She is investigating many facets of Gambierdiscus in an effort to combat the serious food-borne illness they inflict on people.
Image Of the Day caption:
Graduate student Katie Pitz collects specimens of coral rubble in an effort to combat a serious and prevalent food-borne illness plaguing tropical islands: ciguatera fish poisoning. CFP affects thousands of people annually, causing nausea, diarrhea, muscle aches, and neurological symptoms that can persist for days or months. Pitz is in the MIT-WHOI Joint Program in Oceanography, where she conducts research on the microscopic phytoplankton that produce CFP toxins and live on dead coral and seaweed. The toxins move up the food chain as small fish that eat the phytoplankton are eaten by larger fish that are consumed by people.
Photo by Melissa Moulton
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
http://www.whoi.edu/oceanus/feature/trouble-in-the-tropics
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