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NEWS
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News Release |
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McKay awarded Humboldt Fellowship BOWLING GREEN, O.—Dr. R. Michael McKay, an associate professor of biological sciences at Bowling Green State University, has
received a 2005 Alexander von Humboldt Foundation Research Fellowship.
The fellowship will enable him to continue his work on aquatic biosensors at the Leibniz Institute of Marine Sciences at Kiel
University in Germany.
McKay and Dr. George Bullerjahn, a BGSU biology professor specializing in microbial physiology, are developing new technology
to better assess nutrient availability in aquatic ecosystems. Many regions of the ocean suffer from a shortage of iron or
nitrogen; a lack of one or other of these key nutrients inhibits the oceans’ productivity.
McKay will collaborate with Dr. Julie La Roche of the institute’s Marine Biogeochemistry Division to further work on a project
that McKay and Bullerjahn initiated, titled “Development and Characterization of Whole Cell Luminescent Bioreporters of Iron
for Use in Marine Environments.”
While in Germany, McKay will focus on the development of diatom bioreporter organisms, one of the most important plankton
groups with respect to global production.
“Access to the expertise and research infrastructure available at the Leibniz Institute will be important in providing the
opportunity to field test our bioreporter strains with water collected from the Baltic Sea, a region where both nitrogen and
iron deficiency have been reported,” said McKay.
Since receiving his Ph.D. in biology at McGill University in 1992, McKay has completed postdoctoral fellowships at the University
of Delaware, The 2001 recipient of BGSU’s Outstanding Young Scholar Award, McKay has published a book chapter and 32 refereed
articles, including 18 since he joined the BGSU faculty in 1997. His papers have appeared in Nature, among other journals.
The McKay will leave in January for Germany, where he will be working for seven months.
The Humboldt Foundation is a non-profit organization established by the Federal Republic of Germany to promote international
research cooperation. It enables highly qualified scholars who do not reside in Germany to spend extended periods of time
in the country conducting collaborative research.
(Posted November 17, 2004 )
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