Shinagawa Etchujima Campus
Graduate School of Marine Science and Technology
The Graduate School of Marine Science and Technology has a doctoral course divided into a master's course and a doctoral course, and trains independent highly specialized professionals who open up cutting-edge fields.Furthermore, in collaboration with the Japan Fisheries Research and Education Agency, the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, and the National Institute of Maritime, Port and Aviation Technology, we will further enhance education and research and improve the quality of graduate students. We are trying to
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School of Marine Life ScienceShinagawa Campus
- Department of Marine Biological Resources
- Department of Food Production Science
- Department of Ocean Policy and Culture
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School of Marine TechnologyEtchujima Campus
- Undergraduate Course of Maritime Systems Engineering
- Undergraduate Course of Marine Electronics and Mechanical Engineering
- Undergraduate Course of Logistics and Information Engineering
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Faculty of Marine Resources and EnvironmentShinagawa Campus
- Department of Marine Environmental Science
- Department of Marine Resources and Energy
[Awards and Commendations] Diego Otero Andre Huama (2nd year master's student) received the Young Researcher Excellent Poster Presentation Award at the Habitable Japan 6 General Meeting.
At the 6 general meeting of the Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research, Academic Transformation Area A "Habitable Japan," graduate student Diego Otero Andre Huama of our university won the Young Researcher Excellent Poster Presentation Award.
【Winner】
Diego Otero Andre Huama (2nd year master's student, Graduate School of Marine Science and Technology, majoring in Marine Resources and Environmental Studies) *At the time of award
[Title of award-winning research]
Upwelling wind seasonality matters for phytoplankton production and fate of nutrients caused by submesoscale flows, in eastern boundary upwelling systems
[Details of award-winning research]
In this study, high-resolution numerical experiments revealed that, unlike other coastal upwelling regions where strong equatorial winds blow continuously along the coast in summer, in the Peruvian coastal upwelling region where winds blow in winter, much of the upwelled nutrients are not used by phytoplankton, but instead sink back into the subsurface layer due to downward currents in eddies and fronts.
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