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Dear Pete,
I've been doing research with the New England Aquarium since 1983, for 11 years as a paid staff member and since 1994 as NEAq's "Research Scholar" (I'm a professor at Boston University). A great deal of research has been done in collaboration with universities through the Edgerton Research Laboratory and the curatorial departments.
The major hindrances that we have experienced are extreme limitations on space, extreme limitations in staff time availability at the aquarium, and lack of reciprocity in animal care and use protocols. When I was at NEAq and starting up the LV-SSP (Lake Victoria haplochromine SSP) space was so limited that I set up 45 aquariums at home to accomodate the study collection; Scott Dowd, an NEAq aquarist (now active in Project Piaba), helped care for the collection at my home. Today we are conducting collaborative work between BU and NEAq (and Harvard) on brain evolution and neurobiology in Lake Tanganyika cichlids. Most of the details have been worked out.
Les
Les Kaufman Professor of Biology Boston University Marine Program and Center for Ecology and Conservation Biology
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