
Dina Pandya
Articles
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Jan 3, 2025 |
whoi.edu | Dina Pandya
JANUARY 2025 MEDIA TIP SHEETWelcome to Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution’s media tip sheet. Our goal is to provide an advanced or detailed look at stories we believe are impactful or trending and offer WHOI experts if you’re interested in a deeper dive. A new predator found 7,902 meters below the surfaceThe ocean's hadal zone, characterized by darkness and intense pressure, seems uninhabitable, yet dozens of unique organisms call it home.
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Dec 19, 2024 |
whoi.edu | Dina Pandya
When it comes to naming newly discovered species, it’s not unheard of for scientists to draw from the world of fiction in their taxonomic descriptions. There are plenty of examples out there. Like the never-before-seen genus of shrimp found in Southeast Asia in 1997, whose bold-striped patterns earned it the name Potamalpheops tigger after the Whinnie-the-Pooh character Tigger.
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Dec 17, 2024 |
whoi.edu | Dina Pandya
Applied Ocean Physics and Engineering Dept. Julien Bonnel Read moreRead Less My research focuses on the development and use of acoustical techniques and data analysis methods to study the ocean. My activity is interdisciplinary and collaborative, and my lab is open to interns, students and post-docs with various interests, covering signal processing, acoustics, oceanography and marine biology. My personal playground is in between signal processing and ocean acoustics.
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Dec 17, 2024 |
whoi.edu | Dina Pandya
Our vessels circled the globe, our vehicles descended to the depths, and our people never stopped pursuing high-integrity, independent, ocean science. Join us, as we work for the good of our ocean, our planet, and our future. This year our top stories were about pursuing energy and food security solutions without harming marine life or damaging the ocean.
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Dec 6, 2024 |
whoi.edu | Dina Pandya
Scientists have long known that the ocean plays an essential role in capturing carbon from the atmosphere, but a study from Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) shows that the efficiency of the ocean’s “biological carbon pump” has been drastically underestimated, with implications for future climate assessments.
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