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April 2021 Tide Bite

Greetings,
The retirement of long-time staff members from our tight FHL community offers a bittersweet occasion; a chance to have a big party to celebrate their service and accomplishments, while knowing we will miss them. 

FHL Tide Bite

March 2021 Tide Bite

Greetings,
A lot of people hate little critters with a lot of legs – one of those primal fears that has some good evolutionary backing. I personally am not fond of terrestrial animals with 8 or more legs (shudder!), but am quite fond of marine crustaceans with their many legs – go figure. 

FHL Tide Bite

January 2021 Tide Bite

Greetings,
One of the genuinely fun parts of science is when disparate bits of knowledge or previously un-linked tools or techniques come together to let us see novel patterns or explore new scientific realms.  

FHL Tide Bite

Support for Faculty Researchers New to FHL

We are very pleased to announce an opportunity for support to scientists who have never before pursued research at Friday Harbor Labs. FHL NEW FACULTY RESEARCH FELLOWSHIPS are designed to cover the expenses of faculty scientists coming to do research at FHL for the first time. 

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December 2020 Tide Bite

Greetings,
Science often progresses like assembling a puzzle out of many pieces. It’s hard to see the whole picture – and we can’t ‘cheat’ by looking at the box lid! Restoration workers, state agencies, and scientists are all concerned about the decline in bull kelp around the Salish Sea in recent decades, and are struggling to understand the causes. 

FHL Tide Bite

Postdoctoral Scholar Positions at FHL!

The Friday Harbor Laboratories is fortunate to have received private-donor funding to hire two postdoctoral scholars: a Nearshore Ecologist (for up to three years) and a Marine Scientist with any other relevant focus (for up to two years), both with anticipated start date of June 1, 2021. 

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November 2020 Tide Bite

Greetings,
Now and then we are lucky enough to have someone ‘appear’ at FHL who is just right to fill an empty niche. Kirk Sato is that person for us. The FHL Ocean Observing system that he discusses below had spent several years in a mostly-finished but not fully functional state, and we had no staff with the time or expertise to solve the seemingly intractable problems that remained. 

FHL Tide Bite
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