JGI Supports Great Lakes Study

A study of the Great Lakes and “dead zones” in Lake Erie was one of 41 projects chosen for support by the Joint Genomic Institute.

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BOWLING GREEN, OH.—A project by three Bowling Green State University biologists and a colleague is expected to unleash a virtual tsunami of information that will be usable for years to come not only by them but also by scientists worldwide studying greenhouse gases and lake ecosystems.

Drs. George Bullerjahn, Michael McKay and Paul Morris’s study of the Great Lakes and “dead zones” in Lake Erie was one of only 41 projects chosen for support this year by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Joint Genomic Institute (DOE JGI).

The institute will sequence both the DNA and RNA of microbial inhabitants of the central basin of Lake Erie — the spot where “dead zones,” or areas where there is no oxygen, typically occur seasonally.

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