News Release
WHOI Expands Research in Tropical Regions with New Initiative
$600,000 Gift Provides Impetus for New Projects Around the World
With more than 25 percent of the planet lying between the Tropics of
Cancer and Capricorn, researchers at Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution (WHOI) are taking advantage of a recent gift to expand
studies from Panama to Palau and elsewhere around the world.
A $600,000 gift from Rod and Liz Berens of New York will enable WHOI
scientists, engineers, students, and postdoctoral investigators to
pursue new opportunities and expand the Institution’s research in
tropical regions. The gift supports the Institution’s Tropical Research
Initiative (TRI) established in 2005, which was timed to take advantage
of a newly constructed scientific research facility on the Pacific
coast of Panama known as the Liquid Jungle Lab (LJL).
The LJL site offers an undisturbed coastal location where ocean
scientists can study everything from plankton, viruses, dolphins,
jellyfish, corals, reef fish and mangrove swamps to coastal currents.
“It provides WHOI scientists with advanced laboratory facilities in a
region full of marine and terrestrial ecosystems that have not been
well explored,” said Laurence Madin, acting WHOI director of research
and coordinator of WHOI research at the site. Scientists from
WHOI, the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, and the Royal
Botanical Garden of Madrid provided scientific and technical advice on
the design and operation of LJL.
Beyond LJL in Panama, the Tropical Research Initiative has already
launched several new research projects by WHOI scientists, including a
study on coastal changes in Indonesia caused by the December 26, 2004,
tsunami. In addition, five TRI grants were awarded in 2005 to pursue
such projects as the reconstruction of ancient typhoons and Asian
monsoons in Japan and the Caribbean Sea; the study of marine biotoxins
in the U.S. Virgin Islands, which can cause poisoning in humans who eat
contaminated fish; and the use of fossil DNA to study climate change in
Palau.
“We’re excited about the possibilities this gift from Rod and Liz
Berens provides to researchers in all disciplines,” said Cabell Davis,
director of the WHOI Ocean Life Institute. “It gives us much
needed support for innovative pilot projects and provides funds for
staff and students to conduct collaborative research in the tropics on
a wide range of pressing issues.”
Rod Berens is a Trustee and Member of the Corporation of the Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institution. He also serves on the Institution’s Ocean
Life, Access to the Sea, and Employee Retirement Trust and Campaign
Committees.
WHOI is a private, independent marine research and
engineering, and higher education organization in Falmouth, MA. Its
primary mission is to understand the oceans and their interaction with
the Earth as a whole, and to communicate a basic understanding of the
ocean's role in the changing global environment. Established in 1930 on
a recommendation from the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, the
Institution is organized into five departments, interdisciplinary
institutes and a marine policy center, and conducts a joint graduate
education program with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Originally published: November 20, 2006

