Stephanie Day MSci

PhD Student

Stephanie Day MSci

PhD Student

I am a PhD researcher specialising in how organic nutrients sustain shelf sea productivity. My research aims to characterise dissolved organic nutrient pools and examine how these are used by coastal phytoplankton communities.

To investigate my research aims, I will collect and analyse field samples using analytical chemistry techniques and microbiological experiments. These methods will contribute towards unravelling the interactions between organic nutrients and phytoplankton in the Western English Channel coastal environment. My PhD is funded by the Marine Research Plymouth partnership and co-supervised by Dr Katherine Helliwell (MBA), Professor Mark Fitzsimons (University of Plymouth) and Dr Andy Rees (Plymouth Marine Laboratory).During my MSci Environmental Science at the University of East Anglia, I researched how additions of inorganic nutrients to coastal water samples influenced chlorophyll concentration. My atmospheric chemistry internship, master’s year studying at the Institute of Marine and Antarctic Science at the University of Tasmania and recent BIO-CARBON research expedition have nurtured my desire to pursue a marine science research career. I am looking forward to exploring all that Plymouth has to offer.

Frieda Schlegel BSc

PhD Student

Frieda Schlegel BSc

PhD Student

frisch@mba.ac.uk

Keywords: marine microbiology

I am a PhD Student in the Wheeler Group here at the MBA and at the University of Southampton, working on the evolution of calcification in coccolithophores. I am interested in the molecular mechanisms behind the calcification process and their evolutionary origin and development. After doing my BSc in Marine Biology at the university of Stirling, I moved to Plymouth for my MRes and was lucky enought to stay for my PhD. My background is in molecular marine biology with a focus on different animal groups. I am very excited to dive into marine microbiology and learn new skills, especially in different microscopy techniques and algal cell biology.