
sarah gw
@sgigwolf
ID: 1975185962
20-10-2013 13:48:40
298 Tweet
337 Followers
339 Following






Our postdoc search has been extended to April 21! If you'd be interested in the molecular pathogenesis of marine pathogens (up to 3 years), feel free to apply! You'd be working with The Ushijima Lab & our amazing collaborators Julia van Kessel Dor Salomon jobs.uncw.edu/postings/28068

ASM Microbe 2023! Come to the Marine Invertebrate Mass Mortalities in the Caribbean session on Staturday at 1:45 PM! See amazing talks by sarah gw Cornell Marine Mass Mortality Laboratory 🏳️🌈 Erin Papke Margaret Walter & James Evans. With covener Chris!



PhD or Postdoc in Computational Biology, Biomedical Data Science, or CS Rachel Melamed Seeking #PhD and #Postdoc in #datascience #bioinformatics to understand the causes of disease and discover new treatments! Located in greater #Boston ... jobrxiv.org/job/umass-lowe…

Are you interested in how marine species respond to stress over multiple generations or life stages?🦪🐌🌊 I'm looking for PhD students to join my lab UMass Dartmouth in Spring and Fall 2024!! More info here: sarahdonelanphd.weebly.com/opportunities.…


Very excited for my lab to be a part of one of these teams! We will be working on optimizing probiotics for coral restoration using metagenomics. With amazing collaborators 🤗 Dr. Blake Ushijima Perry Institute for Marine Science (PIMS) CORALINA @Ecomares_ONG

Come fly with us! The Waghmare lab Indrayani Waghmare is excited to open at UMass Lowell January 2024. Hiring students and lab techs to study how cells talk to each other: waghmarelab.weebly.com/join-the-lab.h… #PhDBiology #hiring #Drosophila #Wntsignaling #Cell-cell communication #Cancer


Our new paper in Methods in Ecology and Evolution announces marineomics.io, an evolvingseas website sharing tools for rigorous, reproducible genomics in non-model & marine species We outline the site's resources, how they're made, and how YOU can contribute! besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/20…


Protecting marine biodiversity is critically important for our planet. Research by Kennedy College of Sciences at UMass Lowell Asst. Prof. Sarah Gignoux-Wolfsohn and others in One Earth shows problems in the U.S. approach and prescribes solutions. Read more in Smithsonian Magazine brnw.ch/21wGPK2


