USC to Offer Graduate Education Programs for Coastal Lab Staffers
The leadership of the University of South Carolina and the NOAA National
Center for Coastal Ocean Sciences has signed a joint memorandum of agreement
to encourage collaboration and research partnerships with the NOAA Center for
Coastal Environmental Health and Bimolecular Research (CCEHBR) in Charleston.
The scope of this agreement spans an array of related environmental and
public health research and education activities. The CCEHBR operates a
43,000-square-foot laboratory on the grounds of the S.C. Department of Natural
Resources Marine Resources Center at Fort Johnson near the mouth of Charleston
Harbor.
Under the agreement, the university will offer appropriate graduate education
programs for CCEHBR staffers.
In exchange, USC faculty and graduate students will have use of the
Charleston facility for research related to environmental health, analytical
chemistry, ecotoxicology, environmental genomics, coastal bioterrorism, and the
impacts of urbanization.
The agreement also facilitates joint research projects (funded and otherwise)
between USC partners and CCEHBR researchers. USC partners covered under the
agreement are the Arnold School of Public Health, including its Department of
Environmental Health Sciences and the Center for Public Health Preparedness.
Other partners are the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry and the Baruch
Institute for Marine and Coastal Sciences.
“The Arnold School has had a long history of productive collaborations with
CCEHBR over the past 15 years. The CCEHBR director, Dr. Geoffrey Scott, and
several other CCEHBR scientists are adjunct faculty in the Arnold School. This
agreement expands opportunities for CCEHBR collaboration to other frequent
Arnold School collaborators in environmental chemistry and marine sciences.
“On the CCEHBR side, they have a very talented pool of more than 100
employees that can benefit from new and continuing education programs in public
health and environmental sciences available at USC,” said Dr. Tom Chandler,
interim dean of the Arnold School of Public Health.
The National Ocean Service, an arm of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration, operates the Charleston laboratory. The facility’s major
research areas include marine toxins and harmful algal blooms, environmental
quality and coastal ecosystem health, land use and presence of chemical
contaminants in the marine environment, and genetic characterization of fish and
shellfish.
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