Coming soon:
BROC field trip episode 4: Scripps Oceanographic Collections
For now please enjoy this teaser!
Dr. Charlotte Seid is the manager of the Benthic Invertebrate Collection at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego. Charlotte received her Ph.D. in Biology from MIT in 2014 and her undergraduate degree in Chemical and Physical Biology from Harvard University in 2010. Prior to joining Scripps in 2017, she managed a marine DNA repository at Northeastern University and worked on lobster health research at the New England Aquarium. Some of Charlotte’s previous underwater adventures include visiting the Aquarius Undersea Laboratory and diving in the submersible Alvin.
Charlotte’s work in the Benthic Invertebrate Collection supports biodiversity research, new species descriptions, education, and outreach at Scripps and beyond. The Collection houses more than 45,000 specimens from diverse habitats worldwide, with a focus on deep-sea ecosystems. During this cruise, Charlotte will focus on preserving and documenting specimens to facilitate team members’ projects, to ensure safe long-term storage at Scripps, and to make these priceless materials discoverable to the broader scientific community
I manage the Pelagic Invertebrate Collection at SIO and specialize in the morphological identification of invertebrate zooplankton with an emphasis on the Euphausiacea, Calanoid Copepoda, and Tunicata of the CA Current System.
My research interests are broad and encompass many aspects of fish evolution. I am most interested in species-level relationships, phylogenetics, systematics and biogeography. What are the boundaries between species? How long have lineages been separated and why? How have groups diversified taxonomically and morphologically over geological timescales?
I am not taxon specific and work/have worked on: lizardfish, rockfish, groupers, wrasses, and headstanding characins (superfamily Anostomoidea).
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