Manuel Olivares

Predoc Trainee
Extension
5886
Office
P-39

My PhD thesis focuses on the study of diel activity rhythms in key marine zooplankton species, particularly copepods, and the factors that trigger and/or modulate such rhythms. My current research includes the study of feeding rhythms through ontogeny of marine copepods, the analysis of behavioral changes in copepod rhythms as a consequence of predation risk, and the assessment of metabolic advantages or disadvantages associated to diel vertical migrations.