The life aquatic
Since that first fateful NASA internship, phytoplankton have continued to stay front and center in Jones’ career. Her current research looks at how ocean currents—which are experiencing the effects of climate change—shape where different kinds of phytoplankton live.
“I use a combination of satellite data, mathematical models and also shipboard data where you actually go out and collect water samples,” she said. “I recently went on a monthlong ocean cruise where I took of some of the highest resolution DNA samples of phytoplankton ever taken before.”
Jones hopes to publish that data soon, as well as the first chapter of her doctoral thesis. In the meantime, she is working on DEI initiatives in her department and is mentoring undergraduates who need help in formulating their vision for the future, like she once did.
“Anyone can be a scientist,” she said. “It’s who you meet along the way, and how they encourage you, that will give you the confidence to make it a reality.”