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News Release 14-084
Ocean's microbial megacity: Like humans, the sea's most abundant organisms have clear daily cycles
Coordinated timing may have implications for ocean food web
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Scanning electron micrograph of marine planktonic microbes, colorized for contrast.
Credit: Ed DeLong and Dave Karl, University of Hawaii
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Deployment of the Environmental Sample Processor (ESP) for free-drifting plankton sampling.
Credit: MBARI
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Sketch of the Environmental Sample Processor (ESP), suspended from a floatation buoy.
Credit: MBARI
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Research vessel Kilo Moana, from which the Environmental Sample Processor (ESP) was deployed.
Credit: Doug Peebles, University of Hawaii
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Floatation buoy from which the Environmental Sample Processor (ESP) is suspended.
Credit: MBARI
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Transgender sex workers in Jakarta, Indonesia. This "key affected population" has high HIV prevalence but is largely ignored by government efforts. Australia, in contrast, has aggressively targeted its prevention interventions to high-risk groups. See p. 152.
Credit: Photo: Romeo Gacad/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images
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