Dear Ecologgers, I recently took up a faculty position at Dalhousie University (Halifax, Nova Scotia) and will be putting together a global change/aquatic microcosm lab to study species loss in aquatic communities. If anyone has any of the following items clogging up their lab benches I would love to help you get rid of your stuff -- you will be sending it to a good home. I will cover shipping costs or come pick it up if you are in the area.
I am interested in nearly everything that goes along with setting up an aquatic ecology lab including: Glass culture vessels, flasks, other glassware, petri dishes, microscopes (particularly stereomicroscopes), counters/event recorders, Stempel-Hempel pipettors, Untermohl settling chambers, oxygen meters, pH meters, refractometers, coulter counters, growth chambers, aquariums, aquarium heaters, plankton splitters, chemostats, nutrient autoanalyzers, data-sondes, optical plankton counters, light/dark bottles, drying ovens, bomb calorimeters, electronic balances, specimen jars, microscope slides, Nitex(r) netting, sieves, hand held GPS units, Sedgwick-Rafter Cells, Nanoplankton Chambers, Mounting Medium, respirometers, etc. I am also be interested in used books (particularly ecology, limnology, invertebrates), taxonomic keys (particularly for zooplankton, insects, worms). If you have something not listed here that might be useful please do not hesitate to suggest something! Thanks in advance Tamara N. Romanuk, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Department of Biology, Dalhousie University 1355 Oxford Street, Halifax, Nova Scotia Canada, B3H 4J1 Tel: 902-494-4515, Cell: 902-412-2886 Fax: 902-494-3736, Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] or [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.foodwebs.org http://myweb.dal.ca/tm632910 "Eyes Bob, Look at me." "But you said write it all down!" "Yes, I know I said that. But what I meant was -- refer to your notes, don't attach yourself to them like some type of mollusc". The relevance of invertebrate biology to everyday life -- ReGenesis S02E04