Kathleen Lotterhos Assistant Professor of Marine and Environmental Sciences k.lotterhos@neu.edu 617.373.2059 Expertise climate change and evolutionary and ecological changes, evolutionary genetics, Genetics and evolution in marine systems Kathleen Lotterhos in the Press Wired Magazine How Supergenes Beat the Odds—and Fuel Evolution In one recent effort, Katie Lotterhos, an evolutionary marine biologist at Northeastern University, built a computer model to study the first tentative steps taken on the path from inversion to supergene. The Star Ocean surface climates may disappear by 2100: study Lead study author Katie Lotterhos, from Northeastern University’s Marine Science Center, said the ocean’s changing composition due to carbon pollution would likely impact all surface species. CNET News Climate change’s effect on ocean surfaces could force marine life to ‘adapt or die’ “If they are narrowly adapted to the conditions that they live in, and those conditions start to disappear or be replaced with novel climates,” said Katie Lotterhos, an associate professor of marine and environmental sciences at Northeastern University, “they can’t disperse to a place, or migrate to a place, where they’re going to find that […] CBC News 95% of existing ocean climates could disappear by 2100 if CO2 emissions continue to climb “Previous studies have looked at specific locations and said, ‘Okay, this location’s getting warmer, or this location is getting acidic.’ What we did was, we looked at the whole climate of the global ocean,” said lead author Katie Lotterhos, associate professor of marine and environmental sciences at Northeastern University’s Marine Science Center in Nahant, Maine. France 24 Ocean surface climates may disappear by 2100: study Lead study author Katie Lotterhos, from Northeastern University’s Marine Science Center, said the ocean’s changing composition due to carbon pollution would likely impact all surface species. “Species that are narrowly adapted to a climate that is disappearing will have to adapt to different conditions,” she told AFP. Nature.com Craft beautiful equations in Word with LaTeX For Google Docs users, the Auto-LaTeX add-on can turn LaTeX equations into embedded images. Katie Lotterhos, a marine and environmental scientist at Northeastern University in Boston, says this combination of tools works particularly well for her, because most of her collaborators do not know how to use the typesetting language. Kathleen Lotterhos for Northeastern Global News Students dissect oysters and squid, learn about coastal ecology during the annual high school symposium at Northeastern Students dissect oysters and squid, learn about coastal ecology during the annual high school symposium at Northeastern Students got a chance to talk with scientists during the event, which was sponsored by Northeastern and the Massachusetts Marine Educators. Marine scientist uses genetics to inform conservation Marine scientist uses genetics to inform conservation New assistant professor Kathleen Lotterhos of Northeastern’s Marine Science Center uncovers clues to environmental sustainability by using genetic analyses to study species from pine trees to Pacific rockfish.
Wired Magazine How Supergenes Beat the Odds—and Fuel Evolution In one recent effort, Katie Lotterhos, an evolutionary marine biologist at Northeastern University, built a computer model to study the first tentative steps taken on the path from inversion to supergene.
The Star Ocean surface climates may disappear by 2100: study Lead study author Katie Lotterhos, from Northeastern University’s Marine Science Center, said the ocean’s changing composition due to carbon pollution would likely impact all surface species.
CNET News Climate change’s effect on ocean surfaces could force marine life to ‘adapt or die’ “If they are narrowly adapted to the conditions that they live in, and those conditions start to disappear or be replaced with novel climates,” said Katie Lotterhos, an associate professor of marine and environmental sciences at Northeastern University, “they can’t disperse to a place, or migrate to a place, where they’re going to find that […]
CBC News 95% of existing ocean climates could disappear by 2100 if CO2 emissions continue to climb “Previous studies have looked at specific locations and said, ‘Okay, this location’s getting warmer, or this location is getting acidic.’ What we did was, we looked at the whole climate of the global ocean,” said lead author Katie Lotterhos, associate professor of marine and environmental sciences at Northeastern University’s Marine Science Center in Nahant, Maine.
France 24 Ocean surface climates may disappear by 2100: study Lead study author Katie Lotterhos, from Northeastern University’s Marine Science Center, said the ocean’s changing composition due to carbon pollution would likely impact all surface species. “Species that are narrowly adapted to a climate that is disappearing will have to adapt to different conditions,” she told AFP.
Nature.com Craft beautiful equations in Word with LaTeX For Google Docs users, the Auto-LaTeX add-on can turn LaTeX equations into embedded images. Katie Lotterhos, a marine and environmental scientist at Northeastern University in Boston, says this combination of tools works particularly well for her, because most of her collaborators do not know how to use the typesetting language.