By Topic
You may be using an older version of the Adobe Flash Player.
To enjoy multimedia content on WGBH.org, please
click here to upgrade to the latest version of the free Flash player.
Coral Reefs: Ecology and Evolution
April 6, 2009
Daniel Thornhill postdoctoral scholar, marine biology
Marine biologist Dan Thornhill discusses his work investigating the physiological, ecological, and evolutionary processes driving speciation in marine environments. Recently, he has studied marine organisms from tropical coral reefs, Norwegian fjords, deep-sea methane seeps, and the waters around Antarctica.
In the near term, much of his work will focus on symbioses in corals and siboglinid annelids. In addition to being important "keystone" species in coral reef and chemosynthetic ecosystems, these organisms offer a diversity of both host and symbiont taxa, enabling comparative testing of many ecological and evolutionary hypotheses.
Animals & Insects | coral | coral reef | marine biology | ocean | Science | scuba | sea | snorkel | Biodiversity | Nature & Environment | Energy & Conservation | Biology | Environment | Habitat | Humans & Nature | Oceans & Aquatic Life | Plant Life
There are no books associated with this lecture.
Login or register to post comments

