Tuesday, 3 December 2024

So long, Ocean Genomes... and thanks for all the fish!

After a successful couple of years, today was my last day at UWA. I am proud of the team that I helped to build at the Minderoo Oceanomics Centre at UWA, and the things we have accomplished together. The UWA Oceans Institute has been a fantastic place to work, and I look forward to completing some exciting ongoing collaborations in my capacity as adjunct. It's been exciting to see Ocean Genomes grow from a concept with a largely empty lab to a fully-fledged genome factory capable of generating multiple high-quality genomes a week. The associated publications should hopefully be following soon, and I look forward to continued collaboration with the team as an Oceans Institute adjunct.

Developments in DNA sequencing technology over the past few years have been immense, but the most impressive part for me has been witnessing the laboratory technical team optimising the sample preparations for sequencing. Everything gets so much harder when you move from human samples (the focus of most methods development and testing) into non-model organisms, and I am convinced that the quality of genomes we’ve been producing is in large part due to the quality of the DNA going into the sequencers.

I am now looking for my next challenge and am officially Open For Work. We’ll be moving back to Dublin at the end of January. If you are based in Ireland and need an experienced interdisciplinary problem solver with broad expertise across bioinformatics and biomolecular science, please get in touch! Academic and non-academic opportunities are welcome.

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