MICHELLE SHERO, PH.D.
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The Shero Lab, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
From Cells to Behavior of Marine Mammal Life History
Interested in joining the lab? Check out the Join the Lab page.

The Shero Lab
Interests

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Dr. Michelle Shero is a tenure-track Assistant Scientist at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution's Biology Department, studying the physiological ecology of marine mammals. 

How is an animal expected to be able to “make a living” in an ever-changing environment? – and why are some animals more successful, that is, survive and reproduce more than others? These are the types of questions we seek to answer in the lab. 
The Shero Lab focuses on the linkages between energy balance and physiological condition, behavior, and reproductive success of marine mammals. Understanding how these are ultimately linked with complex, multifaceted traits such as performance and life-long animal fitness has important implications for population dynamics and conservation. Thus, our research has proceeded among three lines: 1) understanding how marine mammals’ physiological plasticity allows them to cope with dramatic environmental changes, 2) how condition is linked with dive capacities and foraging behavior, and 3) determining how physiological and behavioral shifts contribute to reproductive success and life-long fitness. The lab has primarily worked with polar marine mammals, as their high-latitude environments have accentuated their adaptations for study of physiological and behavioral principles. Yet, the questions we seek to answer and tools developed in the lab have broad applicability.
The lab takes an integrative approach, using a diverse toolset to assess the processes driving intra- and inter-specific variation in marine mammal life history cycles. Such tools include: genomic sequencing, muscle biochemistry, endocrinology, ultrasonography, morphometrics and isotope dilution, telemetric dive recorders, and unmanned aerial systems (i.e., drones).
Curriculum Vitae

Professional Appointments

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2018-present, Assistant Scientist, tenure-track. Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Department of Biology

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2018-present, Affiliate Associate Professor, University of Alaska Anchorage, Department of Biological Sciences

2018, Post-Doctoral Researcher, 
​Duke University Marine Laboratory

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2015-2018, Post-Doctoral Researcher, 
​University of Alaska Anchorage, Department of Biological Sciences

​2015-2016, 
Visiting Researcher, 
​University of Saskatchewan, Western College of Veterinary Medicine



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2015, Ph.D. in Marine Biology
University of Alaska Fairbanks, School of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences (National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellow)


2010, B.A. in Biology, minor in Environmental Studies
St. Mary's College of Maryland
​summa cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa

Check out what we've been doing!
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Seal Spy
Drones helps WHOI scientist measure the body mass of mother and pup seals during lactation

​© Michelle Shero
All photos taken under NMFS permits 87-1851 & 17411
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