News Archives
Research News at Kewalo Marine Lab
October/December 2011
The Seaver Lab welcomes Dr. Bruno Pernet from California State University at Long Beach. Dr. Pernet is interested in maternal investment and egg size and the evolution of larval forms in spiralians. Bruno has come to the Seaver Lab for three months to do some experimental embryology and also master molecular techniques pertinent to his research interests in polychaete annelids. Welcome Bruno!
In August, Dr. Robert Richmond traveled to Okinawa and Tokyo at the invitation of the Sasakawa Peace Foundation to discuss coral reef conservation efforts in Micronesia and regional capacity development and gave two invited seminars on his lab's research. Recently, the Executive Director of the SPF approved a grant request by Bob for $20,000 to support the participation of Pacific Islanders in the upcoming 12th International Coral Reef Symposium in Cairns, Australia. Bob also met with The President and the Dean of the Faculty of Science of the University of the Ryukyus regarding continued collaborations in coral reef and environmental research in the Pacific.
Sean MacDuff from the Richmond Lab, was invited to Okinawa, Japan to participate as a panel member in the Asia-Pacific Youth Exchange Science Exchange Forum (APYSEF). The aim of the three-day forum was to get young college students from the Asia-Pacific region to identify threats and solutions to their ocean ecosystems and communities. Sean presented on how coral reefs respond to and recover from land-based pollution, and also led a group of 8 undergraduates in a discussion on land-based pollution. The forum was organized by the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology (OIST) and by the University of the Ryukyus. Nice work, Sean!
"Good Samaritan" Jorg Anson, an undergraduate NSF-URM student in the Richmond Lab, recently came to the aid of a woman in need of help with her car in Manoa. The grateful woman made a point to publicly thank Jorg in the August 17 edition of Midweek. Nice demonstration of your kindness and generosity, Jorg!
Drs. Mark Martindale, Eric Roettinger, Michael Layden, and Kevin Pang, as well as graduate students Tim DuBuc and David Simmons presented their research at the international workshop: "Searching for Eve: Basal Metazoans and the Evolution of Multicellularity" in Tutzing, Germany in September. This biennial meeting brings together researchers from around the world who are interested in studying basal metazoans to gain insight to the evolution of animal diversity. Nice work, Martindale Lab!
August/September 2011
The 2011 summer Undergraduate Research Mentoring (URM) Program ended on Friday, July 29 with a great, all-day symposium at Kewalo Marine Lab. Twenty-three undergraduate interns presented the results of their summer research efforts to an audience of 70+ people. Eight of the interns did their internships at Kewalo Marine Lab. (View the URM Symposium 2011 Program). Best wishes to all the URM interns!
From August 8-12, Dr. Michael Hadfield will be hosting 14 community college instructors from across the Pacific for a five-day short course on "Microbes in the Sea", supported by an National Science Foundation-Centers for Ocean Sciences Education Excellence (NSF-COSEE) grant. Returning to teach part of the course are former Kewalo Marine Lab faculty members Ned Ruby and Margaret McFall-Ngai.
Dr. Robert Richmond's National Science Foundation-Advanced Technological Education (NSF-ATE) grant was featured in U.S. News and World Report in July. The grant supports the Partnership for Advanced Marine and Environmental Science Traning for Pacific Islanders. Dr. Richmond serves as director of the program. You can read the article here. Nice work, Bob.
Dr. Elaine Seaver's lab welcomes undergraduate Nanea Cavaco to their lab. Nanea is a participant in the Minority Access to Research Careers (MARC) program at the University of Hawaii. The MARC program promotes undergraduate student training in academic research. Nanea is interested in cell and molecular biology and will be working on the development and regeneration in the annelid worm Capitella. Welcome, Nanea!
July 2011

Aldine Amiel's stunning image of an Euprymna scolopes embryo and adult was selected as one of two winners of the Developmental Biology Cover Contest. Her winning photograph will be featured on the cover of the July 15 issue (Volume 355, Issue 2) of Developmental Biology. Beautiful work, Aldine!
The 2011 summer Undergraduate Research Mentoring (URM) program began on May 23, with 23 interns from arond the Pacific Islands, including the Marshall Islands, the Federated States of Micronesia, Palau, and Guam. Each intern works with a UH faculty mentor (from Kewalo Marine Lab, Botany, Zoology, HIMB, or JABSOM) on an individual research project, the results of which are presented at an all-day symposium at Kewalo Marine Lab at the end of July. Kewalo Marine Lab is hosting 7 research interns this year, and Dr. Michael Hadfield is the Principal Investigator for the five-year NSF grant that supports this program. Best wishes to all the URM interns!

Kewalo Marine Lab URM Program interns Jorg Anson and Leinson Neth recently traveled to their home island of Pohnpei to work with the Conservation Soceity of Pohnpei on the NOAA-supported regional coral program entitled "From Science to Conservation: Linking Coral Reefs, Coastal Watersheds and their Human Communities in the Pacific Islands". While there, they collected corals for DNA damage analyses tied to watershed discharges and were interviewed by the local newspaper The Kaselehlie Press. Nice work, Jorg and Leinson!

Graduate student Emi Yamaguchi volunteered to host a group of 20 elementary school children on a field trip from the nearby Children's Discovery Center's Summer Camp in June. The children had a chance to observe the different marine critters found in our outdoor 3,000 gallon circular seawater tanks and made their own coral colonies constructed from recycled egg cartons. It was a great learning experience for all, and a perfect opportunity to pique the interest of future marine biologists. Thanks, Emi!


Three Kewaloites, Dr. Robert Richmond Dr. Yimnang Golbuu, and high school intern Tiani Noholowa'a were invited fellows, participating in last week's "Kava Bowl Ocean Summit", an international meeting of researchers, policy makers, business leaders, traditional conservation practitioners, and navigators, that focused on marine conservation efforts in the Pacific. Long-time KML collaborator, Noah Idechong, Speaker of the Palau National Congress, was among the keynote speakers, along with ocean conservation pioneer Sylvia Earle, and the Chief Navigator for the Hokule'a, Nainoa Thompson. Tiani was the youngest of the "young guns" invited to participate and share their views on the future of the oceans.


Drs. Mark Martindale, Elaine Seaver, and Yale Passamaneck attended the Second International Congress on Invertebrate Morphology at Harvard University in June. They each gave oral presentations of their current research findings at the meeting. They were also joined by Dr. Michael Boyle, a former Ph.D. student in the Seaver Lab who is working as a post-doctoral researcher at the Smithsonian Marine Station in Fort Pierce, FL.

Dr. Robert Richmond and his post-doc Dr. Yimnang Golbuu were invited scientists for a working group meeting organized by the Center for Ocean Solutions, Stanford University, on the effects of climate change on coral reefs. Dr. Steve Palumbi, a past director of the Kewalo Marine Lab and present director of Stanford's Hopkins Marine Lab, chaired the meeting.
An article on the "Coral Whisperers" project, entitled "Dr. Dolittle meets CSI", featuring work by the Richmond lab, appeared in the recent issue of the journal Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment on page 149.
June 2011

Eric Roettinger's beautiful marine life photography has made the cover of yet another journal. This time, his photo of he'e, or the Hawaiian day octopus, is on the cover of the June 1 issue of the EMBO Journal. His image was also included as one of the "Favorites of the Jury" from the 2011 Cover Contest at the EMBO Journal. Congratulations, Eric!
Tim DuBuc was awarded the Best Research Support Award for his presentation at the John A. Burns School of Medicine's Biomedical Sciences Symposium in April. Congratulations to Tim!
Dr. Néva Meyer's is in the news again! Dr. Meyer has recently accepted a tenure-track Assistant Professorship at Clark University in Worcester, MA. She will be joining the Department of Biology at Clark in September 2011. Good luck, Néva!
Yale Passamaneck's recent research on eye evolution and brachiopods continues to receive press. His work was recently featured on the popular and respected science blog, Pharyngula, as well as in a News & Views feature in Nature.
Casey Dunn, a former post-doctoral fellow in the Martindale Lab, was selected as the 2011 recipient of the prestigious Alan T. Waterman Award from the National Science Foundation. The Waterman Award recognizes an outstanding young researcher in any field of science or engineering supported by NSF. Dr. Dunn is only the second evolutionary biologist to receive this award since it was established in 1976. Dr. Dunn is currently an Assistant Professor of Biology at Brown University. (Photo courtesy of Brown University).
May 2011
Dr. Mark Q. Martindale served as chairman of the local organizing committee for the 2011 Society for Developmental Biologists West Coast Regional Meeting, held at the Waikiki Outrigger Reef Hotel, April 14-16th, 2011. The meeting brought together prominent developmental biologists from the West Coast and Asia. Visit the meeting website for more information and for a list of the student & post-doc presentation award winners. (Photo: Thomas Schilling, UC Irvine; P.Z. Meyers, U of Minnesota & Pharyngula blogger; Ida Chow, Executive Officer of SDB; Richard Behringer, M.D. Anderson, Houston; Brad Davidson, U of Arizona).
James Campbell high school senior Tiani Leina'ala Naholowaa was selected as a recipient of a Senior Research Award from the Hawaiʻi Conservation Alliance at the Hawaiʻi State Science & Engineering Fair held from March 28-30 at the Hawaiʻi Convention Center. Tiani performed her research on "Coral bleaching: how elevated seawater temperatures affect Hawaiʻi's corals" in the lab of Dr. Robert Richmond with the assistance of Jonathan Martinez. Congratulations, Tiani!
April 2011

Tim DuBuc and Cawa Tran each won a Best Presentation award at the 36th Annual Albert Tester Symposium at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa. Tim's talk was titled "Early injury responses in a cniarian sea anemone, Nematostella vectensis". Cawa's presentation was on "Sensory mechanisms utilized by coral planulae to detect settlement cues". David Sischo and Emi Yamaguchi, both graduate students at Kewalo Marine Lab, also gave presentations at the symposium. Congratulations to all the Kewalo graduate students who participated.
Dr. Néva Meyer's recent publication on the fate map of the polychaete Capitella teleta has now made it to the BioMed Central's 5th Annual Research Awards short-list for the Biology Prize. These awards recognize ground-breaking research published in the BioMed Central journals. Her article can be found at the EvoDevo Journal website. Good luck, Néva!
Yale Passamaneck was featured on The Scientist in a video discussing his recent research on eye development and evolution in brachipods. You can see the video here.
March 2011
Dr. Yale Passamaneck's recent article on brachiopod photoreception and its striking implications for eye evolution (see our Featured Research section) has been receiving much attention in the press since its publication on March 1. His novel research has been featured in The New York Times, The Scientist, and a press release by the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, and was most recently featured in the top-ranked science blog, Pharyngula. His article can be found at the EvoDevo Journal website. Congratulations, Yale!
Dr. Néva Meyer's recent publication on the fate map of the polychaete Capitella teleta has been nominated for the Biology Prize at BioMed Central's 5th Annual Research Awards. These awards recognize ground-breaking research published in the BioMed Central journals. Her article can be found at the EvoDevo Journal website. Congratulations, Néva!

Jonathan Martinez and Sean MacDuff from the Richmond Lab presented papers at the annual American Society for Limnology and Oceanography Aquatic Sciences meeting in Puerto Rico last month. Jon's research focused on the effects of alien invasive algal canopies on coral reef habitat biogeochemical processes, and Sean presented his work on the sediment dynamics following large-scale algal removal in Maunalua Bay.
As members of the Coral Whisperer Project, Dr. Robert Richmond and researchers from five other universities analyze the biochemical "mayday" signals put out by corals stressed by environmental toxins. These tests can be used to identify the source of the stress and pinpoint likely culprits. The practical applications of this research were recently demonstrated in a lawsuit between the people of Yap in Micronesia and a cargo shipping company. You can read about it in The New Scientist.
February 2011
Kewalo Marine Lab was well-represented at the 2011 Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology (SICB) annual meeting this past January in Salt Lake City, Utah. Members from the Hadfield, Martindale, and Seaver Labs gave oral and poster presentations of their research to an international audience at the conference. Nice showing, KML researchers!
Congratulations to Dr. Robert Richmond who just started his four-year term as President of the International Society for Reef Studies. Dr. Richmond was featured recently on Hawaii Public Radio, and you can hear an interview with him here. Best wishes, Bob!
Dr. Mark Q. Martindale has been named chairman of the local organizing committee for the 2011 Society for Developmental Biologists West Coast Regional Meeting, to be held at the Waikiki Outrigger Reef Hotel, April 14-16th, 2011.
December 2010
Congratulations to Ms. Emi Yamaguchi from the Seaver Lab, who received an Edmondson Grant from the Department of Zoology. Emi will use the grant to support her thesis project, which focuses on understanding the role of the Pax-6 gene in nervous system development of the polychate worm, Capitella teleta. Congratulations Emi!
Kewalo Marine Lab welcomes Dr. Jonathan Henry, who is visiting from the University of Illinois. While here, Jon will be collaborating with Dr. Aldine Amiel of the Seaver Lab on a series of laser deletion experiments in polychaete embryos. Jon is an expert with laser deletion systems, and together he and Aldine will delete known cells in early cleavage stage embryos and assay the morphology of resulting larvae to determine the effects of these manipulations on the developmental program.

Congratulations to Dr. Aldine Amiel, Dr. Eric Roettinger, and former post-doctoral researcher Dr. Mattias Ormestad, whose photographs were featured on the cover of the November issue of the journal Integrative and Comparative Biology. Another of Dr. Roettinger's images was also highlighted on the cover of The EMBO Journal. These three Kewalo post-doctoral fellows are the founders of the non-profit organization Kahi Kai. More of their beautiful marine images can be seen at their website, images.kahikai.org.
Dr. Mark Q. Martindale has been named the local organizer for the 2011 Society of Developmental Biologists West Coast Regional Meeting, to be held at the Waikiki Outrigger Reef Hotel, April 14-16th, 2011. Stay tuned for additional details in the coming months!
November 2010
Congratulations to Dr. Kevin Pang, who successfully defended his PhD dissertation in October. Kevin is a Zoology graduate student working in the Martindale Lab. His dissertation research focused on the genes and development of ctenophores (comb jellies) in order to understand more about early animal evolution. Congratulations Kevin!
More congratulations are in order for Dr. Brian Nedved, who successfully defended his PhD dissertation last month. Brian is also a Zoology graduate student working in the Hadfield Lab. For his dissertation, Brian studied neuromuscular development and metamorphosis in the serpulid polychaete, Hydroides elegans. Congratulations Brian!
Graduate student Vinny Gianni from the Seaver Lab took the initiative to design and print an awesome T-shirt for the Kewalo Marine Laboratory. Vinny was able to capture our beautiful location and highlight the longevity of Kewalo Marine Lab - "Progressing scientific research since 1972." If you'd like to purchase one of these limited-run t-shirts, please contact Vinny at giani@hawaii.edu. Very nice work, Vinny!
Graduate student Sean MacDuff from the Richmond Lab received a graduate student award to present his research at the ASLO (American Society for Limnology and Oceanography) Multicultural Program in San Juan, Puerto Rico in 2011. Sean faced some very stiff competition, with more than twice as many applicants as could be supported by the program, and will receive a travel grant to attend the conference. Congratulations, Sean!
The impressive success of the Undergraduate Research and Mentoring Program and its students was recently featured in an article in Mālamalama, the magazine of the University of Hawaiʻi. Dr. Michael Hadfield, who serves as director of the URM Program, and Dr. Robert Richmond mentor students from the Pacific Island nations every year at Kewalo Marine Lab. You can read more about this valuable program, as well as the impact it has had on some of the interns from Kewalo, at Mālamalama.
October 2010
Dr. Robert Richmond was recently elected as the incoming president of the International Society for Reef Studies. The ISRS has about 800 members from 58 countries and publishes the journal Coral Reefs. Dr. Richmond's 4-year term as president begins in January 2011. Congratulations, Bob!
Congratulations to David Simmons, a graduate student in the Martindale Lab. David was selected as a Native Hawaiian STEM Scholar by the Kahuewai Ola Project under the Kuaʻana Student Services at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa. In addition to financial support, David will have the opportunity to work with other STEM Scholars on projects focused on restoring Maunalua Bay under the guidance of Mālama Maunalua, a non-profit, grass-roots organization dedicated to the restoration of Maunalua Bay. Congratulations David!
Dr. Elaine Seaver hosted graduate student Laurel Hiebert of the Oregon Institute of Marine Biology (OIMB) during the month of September. Members of the Seaver lab spent time teaching Laurel molecular techniques directly required for her dissertation project. Laurel studies marine "ribbon worms" and is investigating how the molecular pathways that establish the body axes of the adult worms are used in the evolution of the unique and novel pilidium larva from which these adult worms develop.

Graduate students Jon Martinez and Sean MacDuff of the Richmond Lab recently presented their research findings at a symposium for the Maunalua Community detailing the latest results on the sediment modeling from the algal removal project, which is dedicated to the restoration of Maunalua Bay in East Oahu. Nice work Jon and Sean!
September 2010

Kewalo Marine Lab warmly welcomes Dr. Elizabeth Vallen of Swarthmore College and Dr. Steve DiNardo of the University of Pennsylvania Medical School. Both researchers are here on year-long sabbaticals during which time Dr. Vallen will be collaborating with Dr. Martindale's lab on cnidarian-algal symbioses, and Dr. DiNardo will be working on the evolution of annelid segmentation in Dr. Seaver's lab. Welcome Liz and Steve!
Dr. Mark Martindale is the recent recipient of a prestigious $1 million research grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The four-year grant, awarded through a highly competitive process, will be used to study the evolution of gene regulatory networks and the origin of biological novelties. Additionally, Dr. Martindale has received another $100,000 grant from the Hawaiʻi Community Foundation to develop a new animal model system for understanding the mechanisms underlying human development and disease. Congratulations to Dr. Martindale and his lab!
Dr. Robert Richmond has written an informative op-ed piece on the new national ocean policy recently signed into order by President Obama, and how these new policies will help to protect our valuable national off-shore resources. Dr. Richmond's piece was published in the August 30 issue of the Honolulu Star Advertiser and was picked up by many national and international news media, including the Miami Herald and the Taiwan Times. You can read his piece at the Star Advertiser. Nice work, Bob!
Kewalo Marine Lab also extends our warmest aloha to visiting researcher Dr. Gail Grabowsky. Dr. Grabowsky is spending a 6-month sabbatical leave from Chaminade University working with Dr. Hadfield as the COSEE Academic Organizer in charge of designing and executing the training program for the Centers for Ocean Science Education Excellence. Welcome Gail! (Photo courtesy of Chaminade University).
Dr. Mark Martindale was invited to speak at the Distinguished Lecturer Series in the Genetics and Genomics Program at Duke University. The title of Dr. Martindale's seminar, which was very well-received, was "Developmental changes associated with the radical evolution of animal body plans: The details are in the entrails".
August 2010
Michael Boyle, a recently minted Ph. D. from the Seaver Lab received a Smithsonian Marine Science Network Postdoctoral Fellowship Award. Michael began his postdoctoral research at the Smithsonian Marine Station in Fort Pierce, Florida in March 2010. During his two year fellowship, Michael will work under the guidance of Dr. Mary Rice on the development and evolution of the gut in sipunculans of the Gulf Coast. Congratulations Michael!
Department of Zoology graduate student and KML member, Marie-Therese Noedl, received a competitive research grant from the Hawaiian Malacological Society. Marie's dissertation research includes an investigation of appendage development of the Hawaiian bobtail squid Euprymna scolopes. Earlier this year, Marie traveled to Seattle to present her research results at the Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology Annual Conference (January 2010). Congratulations Marie!
July 2010
Former KML postdoctoral fellow Dr. Andreas Hejnol has been appointed Senior Group Leader at the prestigious Sars International Centre
for Marine Molecular Biology in Bergen, Norway. Although the water is colder (and the winter nights longer!), Andi will
continue to utilize the biological diversity found in the world's oceans to further
his work on the comparative molecular analysis of embryonic development
of marine animals. Good luck putting your new lab together Andi! With our
warmest Aloha from Point Panic!
Dr. William Browne begins a tenure track Assistant Professorship at the University of Miami. After serving as a postdoctoral researcher and Assistant Researcher here at KML, Bill is setting up his own research group at the University of Miami. Bill is continuing his work on eye and nervous system development in crustaceans, cnidarians, and comb jellies in the Department of Biology using a variety of modern molecular techniques. He will also be able to continue his blue water rebreather SCUBA diving program and has already been on NOAA cruises in his new locale.
June 2010
David Matus, a former Ph. D. student in the Martindale lab, and current postdoctoral fellow at Duke University, published his most recent work in Science Signaling. His images were featured on the Science website, and an abstract of his article can be read here. Nice work, Dave!
Recent Ph.D. graduate Heather Marlow from the Martindale Lab was a recipient of the RCUH Student Excellence in Research Award at the Doctoral Level for her dissertation research, "Cell type diversity and developmental mechanisms in larval and adult anthozoan cnidarians". Congratulations, Heather!
April 2010

Kewalo Marine Lab graduate students David Simmons and Emi Yamaguchi served as judges for the 53rd Annual Hawaiʻi Science and Engineering Fair, held April 5-7, 2010 at the Hawaiʻi Convention Center. David judged projects in the Junior Research category, which ranged from pH effects on sea urchin development to the effectiveness of ant repellants. Emi judged projects in the Junior Display category, which ranged from shark diversity to the types and effects of artificial sweeteners. Winners of the state fair will move on to the International Science and Engineering Fair in May.
March 2010

Kevin Pang, a graduate student at Kewalo Marine Laboratory, won the "Best Graduate Student Poster" award and Vincent Giani, an undergraduate at Kewalo Marine Laboratory, won the "Best Undergraduate Student Poster" award at the 35th Annual Albert L. Tester Symposium, hosted by the Department of Zoology, University of Hawaiʻi, March 17-19, 2010.
January 2010
Kevin Pang, a graduate student in the Martindale Lab, won the"Best Student Poster" award for the division of Evolutionary Developmental Biology at the 2010 Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology (SICB) conference in Seatte, WA. Congratulations Kevin! The title of his poster is "PANG, K.*; RYAN, J.F.; MULLIKIN, J.C.; BAXEVANIS, A.D.; MARTINDALE, M.Q. Wnt and TGF-beta signaling in the ctenophore, Mnemiopsis leidyi."
October 2009

Dr. Mark Q. Martindale, Director of the Kewalo Marine Laboratory and professor in the Pacific Biosciences Research Center (PBRC) at the University of Hawai'i at Mānoa, has been awarded the prestigious Alexander Kowalevsky Medal for Comparative Embryology for his contributions to the field of evolutionary developmental biology. Read more about it.
June 2009
Eric Roettinger, a postdoctoral fellow and professional photographer in the Martindale Lab, had one of his amazing photographs published on the cover of The EMBO Journal (Volume 28, Number 11). See the cover photo and read about it on the EMBO Journal website.
Kewalo Marine Lab in the News
01 February 2010
NOAA to Give Lab $5 Million to Continue Project ; Honolulu Star Bulletin by Helen Altonn
01 February 2010
Kewalo Marine Lab Closing Opposed; Honolulu Star Bulletin by Helen Altonn
21 September 2009
Scientists Fight for Lab's Future; Honolulu Star Bulletin by Helen Altonn
11 September 2009
Kewalo Basin Lab Grants May Not Be Enough; KITV News by Catherine Cruz
31 May 2009
Ancient Tradition May Be Way to Save Reefs; Honolulu Advertiser by Rob Perez
31 May 2009
Sediment is the Death that Keeps on Killing Our Reefs; Honolulu Advertiser by Rob Perez
31 March 2009
Community Hopes to Restore Maunalua Bay; KGMB News by Brooks Baehr
23 March 2009
Molokai's Reef Remains in Focus for Many Residents and Scientists; Molokai Dispatch by Sean Aronson
17 October 2008
Hawaii Marine Lab Fights to Stay Afloat; Science, Vol.322
23 September 2008
Kewalo Lab's Proposed Closure Protested; Honolulu Star Bulletin by Helen Altonn
07 May 2008
Earth & Sea Project: Restoring Maunalua Bay; KITV News by Mari-Ela David
21 April 2008
UH Redraws Sequence of Animals' Evolution; Honolulu Star Bulletin by Helen Altonn
31 March 2008
Saving Maunalua Bay; Honolulu Star Bulletin by Helen Altonn
25 October 2007
Ocean Update: Paper Contrasts Coral Reef Conservation in Western Pacific Island Nations; SeaWeb (Volume 12, Number 7)
04 October 2007
Coral Health Depends on Ridge to Reef Ecosystem Management; Environment News Service
15 August 2007
The National Geographic Channel airs Explorer: Jellyfish Invasion. PBRC researchers Angel Yanagihara and Mark Martindale contributed to this episode.
08 July 2007
Genetically, Sea Anemone Has Human Complexity; Honolulu Star Bulletin by Helen Altonn
24 July 2005
Marine Lab Looks for New Home; Honolulu Star Bulletin by Helen Altonn

