However, an onsite interview is not required for admission, nor is it necessary to know or have the support of a specific faculty member. Admission to the Joint Program is highly competitive. Most successful applicants have completed an undergraduate degree or equivalent in a basic science or engineering discipline.
A Joint Committee made up of staff members from both institutions evaluates applications, and notification is made to the applicants by mid-February. Contact alumni whoi. Personal email addresses are preferred because professional ones seem to change more frequently. We promise to keep mailings to a minimum. There's also a listserv for employment opportunities called jpjobs whoi. Graduate study in oceanography encompasses virtually all of the basic sciences as they apply to the marine environment: physics, chemistry, geochemistry, geology, geophysics, and biology.
Biological Oceanography — Biological oceanography is the study of life in the oceans—the distribution, abundance, and production of marine species along with the processes that govern species' spread and development. Biological oceanographers study chemical and physical factors influencing distribution patterns; physiological, behavioral, and biochemical adaptations to environmental variables, including natural variations in food, temperature, pressure, light, and the chemical environment; food chain dynamics; nutrient cycling and initial steps of chemical energy fixation and; responses to the results of man's activities in the oceans.
In this broad range of work, you can see the many faces of biological oceanography. Answering research questions may require studies in microbiology, planktonology, ichthyology, benthic biology, taxonomy, ecology, biogeochemistry, cell biology, physiology, biochemistry, molecular biology, animal behavior, bioacoustics, and applied mathematics.
In the Joint Program, investigators in many disciplines work together with a unified goal of understanding the interactions between organisms and between organisms and the environment. The chemical and physical processes that influence species distribution and abundance are an integral part of biological oceanography.
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