Jasmine Cane
MPhil Candidate
Jasmine is a recently commenced MPhil student at JCU in 2021. Her project focuses on the Spiny chromis, Acanthochromis polyacanthus, as a model coral reef fish species to explore how ocean warming, acidification, and sedimentation effects juvenile development, and whether these effects vary among generations. This work builds on an existing research project to explore whether the impacts of acidification and sedimentation differ if previous generations (parental and grandparent) have already experienced and acclimated to ocean warming. Her supervisory panel includes Jennifer Donelson (JCU) and Andrew Hoey (JCU).
Her previous work includes two summer projects at University of Otago, in New Zealand, where she received her Bachelor of Science in Zoology and Marine Science. In 2019 she was a summer student under the supervision of Professor Miles Lamare looking at the capacity for thermal adaptation in the Antarctic sea star, Odontaster validus. In 2020 she assisted Dr. Gert-Jan Jeunen in his research exploring the spatial and temporal resolution of marine eDNA, and the efficiency of eDNA retention in different filter-feeding taxa.
James Cook University