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Mary Hagedorn

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Nationality
  
USA

Name
  
Mary Hagedorn

Mary Hagedorn wwwreefrecoveryorgimagesMaryBioShotjpg
Institutions
  
Research Scientist at National Zoological Park and Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute; Affiliate Faculty at the Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology

Alma mater
  
Bachelor's and master's degrees from Tufts University, Ph.D from Scripps Institution of Oceanography at University of California

Known for
  
Pioneering and refining a new process in aquatic cryopreservation: the freezing of coral sperm and eggs for future use

Notable awards
  
Received the George E. Burch Fellowship in Theoretic Medicine and Affiliated Theoretic Sciences in 2000 and nominated as a Pew Fellow in Marine Conservation in 2005

Fields
  
Physiology, Marine biology

Coral conservator smithsonian scientist mary hagedorn


Mary Hagedorn is a US marine biologist specialised in physiology who has developed a conservation program for coral species, using the principles of cryobiology, the study of cellular systems under cold conditions, and cryopreservation, the freezing of sperm and embryos.

Contents

What is coral and why is it important mary hagedorn


Life

Mary Hagedorn grew up in Long Island Sound, Connecticut, where she developed an interest in oceans and sea life. From then on, Hagedorn knew she wanted a job in aquatic species research. She received her bachelor's and master's degrees in Biology from Tufts University, and she earned her Ph.D. in Marine Biology from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography of the University of California at San Diego. Upon graduation, Hagedorn studied fish physiology.

After a trip to the Amazon left two of her colleagues dead, Hagedorn reached a turning point in her career. She decided to stop studying electric fish and focus her physiological efforts on coral, which were impacted by the warming of the oceans.

References

Mary Hagedorn Wikipedia