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DARRELL JAY GRIMES The University of Southern Mississippi 2325 Starfish Road Gulf Coast Research Laboratory Gautier, MS 39553 300 Laurel Oak Drive 228- 497-2953 Ocean Springs, MS 39564 Cell: 228- 806-7700 228-818-8009 [email protected] [email protected] Education : Pre-med, The University of Iowa, 1962-1964 B.A., Biology, Drake University, 1966 M.A., Biology, Drake University, 1968 Ph.D., Microbiology, Colorado State University, 1971 Professional Recognition: Fellow, American Academy of Microbiology Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science Professional Positions : 1/97- Professor, Department of Coastal Sciences (Marine Microbiology), The University of Southern Mississippi, Ocean Springs, MS (tenured 1998) 10/07-10/09 Chairman, Board of Directors, The University of Southern Mississippi Research Foundation 7/04-8/07 Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs, The University of Southern Mississippi (Hattiesburg and Gulf Coast positions were combined in 7/04) 7/03-7/04 Provost – Gulf Coast Campus and Sites, The University of Southern Mississippi 7/02-6/03 Provost – Hattiesburg Campus, The University of Southern Mississippi 2/01-6/02 Dean, College of Marine Sciences, The University of

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Page 1: DARRELL JAY GRIMESgcrl.usm.edu/cv/grimes.jay/docs/DJG_CV.doc · Web viewDr. Chris Whitehouse, U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases Dr. R. Bradley Sack, Bloomberg

DARRELL JAY GRIMES

The University of Southern Mississippi 2325 Starfish RoadGulf Coast Research Laboratory Gautier, MS 39553300 Laurel Oak Drive 228-497-2953Ocean Springs, MS 39564 Cell: 228-806-7700228-818-8009 [email protected]@usm.edu

Education:Pre-med, The University of Iowa, 1962-1964B.A., Biology, Drake University, 1966M.A., Biology, Drake University, 1968Ph.D., Microbiology, Colorado State University, 1971

Professional Recognition:Fellow, American Academy of MicrobiologyFellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science

Professional Positions:1/97- Professor, Department of Coastal Sciences (Marine Microbiology), The

University of Southern Mississippi, Ocean Springs, MS (tenured 1998)10/07-10/09 Chairman, Board of Directors, The University of Southern Mississippi Research

Foundation7/04-8/07 Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs, The University of Southern

Mississippi (Hattiesburg and Gulf Coast positions were combined in 7/04)7/03-7/04 Provost – Gulf Coast Campus and Sites, The University of Southern Mississippi7/02-6/03 Provost – Hattiesburg Campus, The University of Southern Mississippi2/01-6/02 Dean, College of Marine Sciences, The University of Southern Mississippi10/99-2/01 Dean, Institute of Marine Sciences, The University of Southern Mississippi1/97-10/99 Director, Institute of Marine Sciences, The University of Southern Mississippi1/97-7/07 Director, Gulf Coast Research Laboratory, The University of Southern

Mississippi, Ocean Springs, MS8/95-12/95 Senior Partner, Interagency Environmental Technologies Office, National Science

and Technology Council, Executive Office of the President, Washington, D.C. (on detail from DOE, IETO terminated 12/95 for lack of funding)

1/91-8/93 Executive Secretary, Biotechnology Research Subcommittee, Committee on Life Sciences and Health, FCCSET, Washington, D.C.

10/90-1/97 Microbiologist (GS-15/10), Environmental Sciences Division (ER-74), Office of Health and Environmental Research, Office of Energy Research, U.S. Department of Energy, Germantown, MD (Founder and Manager, Microbial Genome Program; Founder and Co-Manager, Natural and Accelerated Bioremediation Research Program)

6/87-10/90 Professor, Department of Microbiology, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH

6/89-7/90 Director, Jackson Estuarine Laboratory, University of New Hampshire

Page 2: DARRELL JAY GRIMESgcrl.usm.edu/cv/grimes.jay/docs/DJG_CV.doc · Web viewDr. Chris Whitehouse, U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases Dr. R. Bradley Sack, Bloomberg

6/87-7/90 Director, Sea Grant College Program, University of New Hampshire6/87-6/89 Director, Institute of Marine Science and Ocean Engineering, University of New

Hampshire (IMSOE terminated 4/90)1/80-6/87 Research Associate Professor, Department of Microbiology, University of

Maryland, College Park, MD 9/76-9/82 Associate Professor, Department of Biology, University of Wisconsin-La Crosse,

La Crosse, WI8/71-8/76 Assistant Professor, Department of Biology, UW-La Crosse (tenured 1975)6/68-9/68 Inspector, Economy Forms Corp., Des Moines, IA9/66-6/68 Teaching Assistantship (Biology, Field Botany, Microbiology, Nurse's Anatomy

and Physiology, Nurse's Microbiology), Drake University, Des Moines, IA

Adjunct and Visiting Positions:6/09 Visiting Professor, National University of Singapore, Singapore3/09-6/10 Adjunct Professor, Department of Environmental Sciences, Louisiana State

University, Baton Rouge7/81-9/83 Visiting Associate Professor, Department of Microbiology, University of

Maryland1/81-6/81 Research Associate, Department of Microbiology, University of Maryland

Research Interests:Biology and ecology of VibrioSystematics of the genera Chromobacterium, Pseudomonas, Vibrio, and VogesellaMicrobiological quality of water resourcesBacteriology of marine fish, especially elasmobranchsLong-term survival of bacteria in aquatic habitatsMicrobiology and bioremediation of ocean and estuarine wastes, especially petroleum

Theses:Grimes, D.J. 1968. Microbial degradation of chlorinated hydrocarbon insecticides. M.A. Thesis.

Drake University, Des Moines, IA. (Dr. Jerrell F. Fair, Advisor)

Grimes, D.J. 1971. Bioconcentration of chlorinated hydrocarbon insecticides by aquatic bacteria. Ph.D. Dissertation, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO. (Dr. Sumner M. Morrison, Major Professor, deceased)

Publications (refereed journal articles):1. Grimes, D.J. 1975. Release of sediment-bound fecal coliforms by dredging. Appl. Microbiol.

29:109-111.

2. Grimes, D.J. and S.M. Morrison. 1975. Bacterial bioconcentration of chlorinated hydrocarbon insecticides from aqueous systems. Microb. Ecol. 2:43-59.

3. Grimes, D.J. 1980. Bacteriological water quality effects of hydraulically dredging contaminated Upper Mississippi River bottom sediment. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 39:782-789.

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4. Grimes, D.J. 1982. Bacteriological water quality effects of clamshell dredging. J. Freshwater Ecol. 1:407-419.

5. LaLiberte, P. and D.J. Grimes. 1982. Survival of Escherichia coli in lake bottom sediment. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 43:623-628.

6. Mach, P.A. and D.J. Grimes. 1982. R-plasmid transfer in a wastewater treatment plant. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 44:1395-1403.

7. Xu, H.-S., N. Roberts, F.L. Singleton, R.W. Attwell, D.J. Grimes and R.R. Colwell. 1982. Survival and viability of nonculturable Escherichia coli and Vibrio cholerae in the estuarine and marine environment. Microb. Ecol. 8:313-323.

8. Grimes, D.J. and R.R. Colwell. 1983. Survival of pathogenic organisms in the Anacostia and Potomac Rivers and the Chesapeake Bay Estuary. J. Wash. Acad. Sci. 73:45-50.

9. Pellett, S., D.V. Bigley and D.J. Grimes. 1983. Distribution of Pseudomonas aeruginosa in a riverine ecosystem. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 45:328-332.

10. Grimes, D.J., F.L. Singleton and R.R. Colwell. 1984. Allogenic succession of marine bacterial communities in response to pharmaceutical waste. J. Appl. Bacteriol. 57:247-261.

11. Grimes, D.J., F.L. Singleton, J. Stemmler, L.M. Palmer, P. Brayton and R.R. Colwell. 1984. Microbiological effects of wastewater effluent discharge into coastal waters of Puerto Rico. Water Res. 18:613-619.

12. Grimes, D.J., J. Stemmler, H. Hada, E.B. May. D. Maneval, F.M. Hetrick, R.T. Jones, M. Stoskopf and R.R. Colwell. 1984. Vibrio species associated with mortality of sharks held in captivity. Microb. Ecol. 10:271-282.

13. Roszak, D.B., D.J. Grimes and R.R. Colwell. 1984. Viable but non-recoverable stage of Salmonella enteritidis in aquatic systems. Can. J. Microbiol. 30:334-338.

14. Palmer, L.M., A.M. Baya, D.J. Grimes and R.R. Colwell. 1984. Molecular genetic and phenotypic alteration of Escherichia coli in natural water microcosms containing toxic chemicals. FEMS Microbiol. Lett. 21:169-173.

15. Hill, G.A. and D.J. Grimes. 1984. Seasonal study of a freshwater lake and migratory waterfowl for Campylobacter jejuni. Can J. Microbiol. 30:845-849.

16. West, P.A., G.C. Okpokwasili, P.R. Brayton, D.J. Grimes and R.R. Colwell. 1984. Numerical taxonomy of phenanthrene-degrading bacteria isolated from the Chesapeake Bay. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 48:988-993.

17. Walker, P.J. and D.J. Grimes. 1984. A note on Yersinia enterocolitica in a swine farm watershed. J. Appl. Bacteriol. 58:139-143.

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18. Grimes, D.J., R.R. Colwell, J. Stemmler, H. Hada, D. Maneval, F.M. Hetrick, E.B. May, R.T. Jones and M. Stoskopf. 1984. Vibrio species as agents of elasmobranch disease. Helgolander Meeresunters. 37:309-315.

19. Colwell, R.R. and D.J. Grimes. 1984. Vibrio diseases of marine fish populations. Helgolander Meeresunters. 37:265-287.

20. Grimes, D.J., S.H. Gruber and E.B. May. 1985. Experimental infection of lemon sharks, Negaprion brevirostris (Poey), with Vibrio species. J. Fish Dis. 8:173-180.

21. Grimes, D.J., P. Brayton, R.R. Colwell and S.H. Gruber. 1985. Vibrios as autochthonous flora of neritic sharks. Syst. Appl. Microbiol. 6:221-226.

22. Colwell, R.R., P.R. Brayton, D.J. Grimes, D.B. Roszak, S.A. Huq and L.M. Palmer. 1985. Viable but non-culturable Vibrio cholerae and related pathogens in the environment: Implications for release of genetically engineered microorganisms. Bio/Technology 3:817-820.

23. Baya, A.M., P.R. Brayton, V.L. Brown, D.J. Grimes, E. Russek-Cohen and R.R. Colwell. 1986. Coincident plasmids and antimicrobial resistance in marine bacteria isolated from polluted and unpolluted Atlantic Ocean samples. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 51:1285-1292.

24. Brayton, P.R., R.B. Bode, R.R. Colwell, M.T. MacDonell, H.L. Hall, D.J. Grimes, P.A. West and T.N. Bryant. 1986. Vibrio cincinnatiensis sp. nov., a new human pathogen. J. Clin. Microbiol. 23:104-108.

25. Okpokwasili, G.C., C.C. Somerville, M. Sullivan, D.J. Grimes and R.R. Colwell. 1986. Plasmid mediated degradation of hydrocarbons in estuarine bacteria. Oil Chem. Pollut. 3:117-129.

26. Grimes, D.J. and R.R. Colwell. 1986. Viability and virulence of Escherichia coli suspended by membrane chamber in semitropical ocean water. FEMS Microbiol. Lett. 34:161-165.

27. Grimes, D.J., P.R. Brayton, P.A. West, F.L. Singleton and R.R. Colwell. 1986. The probabilistic identification of Vibrio spp. isolated from surface seawater with special reference to Vibrio campbellii. Lett. Appl. Microbiol. 2:93-95.

28. Grimes, D.J., R.W. Attwell, P.R. Brayton, L.M. Palmer, D.M. Rollins, D.B. Roszak, F.L. Singleton, M.L. Tamplin and R.R. Colwell. 1986. The fate of enteric pathogenic bacteria in estuarine and marine environments. Microbiological Sciences 3:324-329.

29. Huq, A., S.A. Huq, D.J. Grimes, M. O'Brien, K.H. Chu, J.M. Capuzzo and R.R. Colwell. 1986. Colonization of the gut of the blue crab (Callinectes sapidus) by Vibrio cholerae. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 52:586-588.

30. Attaway, H., J.O. Nelson, A.M. Baya, M.J. Voll, W.E. White, D.J. Grimes and R.R. Colwell.

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1987. Bacterial detoxification of diisopropyl fluorophosphate. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 53:1685-1689.

31. Chapelle, F.H., J.L. Zelibor, Jr., D.J. Grimes and L.L. Knobel. 1987. Bacteria in deep coastal plain sediments of Maryland: a possible source of CO2 to groundwater. Water Resources Res. 23:1625-1632.

32. Zelibor, J.L., Jr., M.W. Doughten, D.J. Grimes and R.R. Colwell. 1987. Testing for bacterial resistance to arsenic in monitoring well water by the direct viable counting method. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 53:2929-2934.

33. Toranzo, A.E., A.M. Baya, B.S. Roberson, J.L. Barja, D.J. Grimes and F.M. Hetrick. 1987. Specificity of slide agglutination test for detecting bacterial fish pathogens. Aquaculture 61:81-97.

34. Knight, I.T., D.J. Grimes and R.R. Colwell. 1988. Bacterial hydrolysis of urea in the tissues of carcharhinid sharks. Can. J. Fish. Aquatic Sci. 45:357-360.

35. Youngren-Grimes, B.L., D.J. Grimes and R.R. Colwell. 1988. Growth of Vibrio cholerae, Vibrio parahaemolyticus, and Vibrio vulnificus under strict anaerobic conditions. Syst. Appl. Microbiol. 11:13-15.

36. Grimes, D.J., J. Burgess, J.A. Crunkleton, Jr., P.R. Brayton and R.R. Colwell. 1989. Potential invasive factors associated with Vibrio carchariae, an opportunistic pathogen for sharks. J. Fish Dis. 12:69-72.

37. Grimes, D.J. 1990. Procaryotes and chondrichthyans: an ancient relationship with public health implications for an expanding fishery. Chondros 2(3):1-2.

38. O'Neill, K.R., S.H. Jones and D.J. Grimes. 1990. Incidence of Vibrio vulnificus in northern New England water and shellfish. FEMS Microbiol. Lett. 72:163-168.

39. Grimes, D.J. 1991. Ecology of estuarine bacteria capable of causing human disease: a review. Estuaries 14:345-360.

40. O'Neill, K.R., S.H. Jones, and D.J. Grimes. 1992. Seasonal incidence of Vibrio vulnificus in the Great Bay Estuary of New Hampshire and Maine. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 58:3257-3262.

41. Grimes, D.J., D. Jacobs, D.G. Swartz, P.R. Brayton and R.R. Colwell. 1993. Numerical taxonomy of gram-negative, oxidase-positive rods from carcharhinid sharks. Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol. 43:88-98.

42. Attaway, D.H. and D.J. Grimes. 1995. Perspectives on marine biotechnology in the United States government. J. Marine Biotechnol. 2:105-107.

43. Grimes, D.J., C.R. Woese, M.T. MacDonell and R.R. Colwell. 1997. Systematic study of the

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genus Vogesella gen. nov. and its type species Vogesella indigofera comb. nov. Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol. 47:19-27.

44. Harvell, C.D., K. Kim, J.M. Burkholder, R.R. Colwell, P.R. Epstein, D.J. Grimes, E.E. Hoffmann, E.K. Lipp, A.D.M.E. Osterhaus, R.M. Overstreet, J.W. Porter, G.W. Smith and G.R. Vasta. 1999. Emerging marine diseases - climate links and anthropogenic factors. Science 285:1505-1510.

45. Grimes, D.J., R.M. Atlas and S. Wald. 2001. Biological resource centers: OECD calls for developing a global network. ASM News 67:598-599.

46. Grimes, D.J. 2004. So many microbes, so little time, and so little money: needs and challenges in developing a global network of biological resource centers. Oceanography 17(3): 52-59.

47. Grimes, D.J. 2006. Koch’s postulates – then and now. Microbe 1:223-228.

48. Phillips, A.M.B., A. DePaola, J. Bowers, S. Ladner and D.J. Grimes. 2007. An evaluation of the use of remotely sensed parameters for prediction of incidence and risk associated with Vibrio parahaemolyticus in Gulf Coast oysters (Crassostrea virginica). J. Food Protection 70:879-884.

49. Zimmerman, A.M., A. DePaola, J.C. Bowers, J.A. Krantz, J.L. Nordstrom, C.N. Johnson and D.J. Grimes. 2007. Variability of total and pathogenic Vibrio parahaemolyticus densities in northern Gulf of Mexico water and oysters. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 73:7589-7596.

50. Johnson, C.N., Y-J. Chang, A.D. Peacock, L. Kline, S. Barnes, J. Ogle and D.J. Grimes. 2008. Microbial community analysis of water, foregut and hindgut during growth of Pacific white shrimp, Litopenaeus vannamei, in closed-system aquaculture. J. World Aquacul. Soc. 39:251-258.

51. Johnson, C.N., A.R. Flowers, V.C. Young, N. Gonzalez-Escalona, A. DePaola and D. J. Grimes. 2009. Genetic relatedness among tdh+ and trh+ Vibrio parahaemolyticus cultured from Gulf of Mexico oysters (Crassostrea virginica) and surrounding water and sediment. Microb. Ecol. 57:437-443.

52. Zimmerman, A.M., D.M. Rebarchik, A.R. Flowers, J.L. Williams and D.J. Grimes. 2009. Escherichia coli detection using mTEC agar and fluorescent antibody direct viable counting on coastal recreational water samples. Lett. Appl. Microbiol. 49:478-483.

53. Grimes, D.J., C.N. Johnson, K.S. Dillon, A.R. Flowers, N.F. Noriea III and T. Berutti. 2009. What genomic sequence information has revealed about Vibrio ecology in the ocean – a review. Microb. Ecol. 58:447-460.

54. Noriea, N.F., III, C.N. Johnson, K.J. Griffitt and D. J. Grimes. 2010. Distribution of type III secretion systems in Vibrio parahaemolyticus from the Northern Gulf of Mexico. J. Appl. Microbiol. 109:953-962.

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55. Johnson, C.N., A.R. Flowers, N.F. Noriea, III, A.M. Zimmerman, J. Bowers, A. DePaola and D.J. Grimes. 2010. Relationships between environmental factors and pathogenic vibrios in the northern Gulf of Mexico. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 76:7076-7084.

56. Griffitt, K.J., N.F. Noriea III, C.N. Johnson and D.J. Grimes. 2011. Enumeration of Vibrio parahaemolyticus in the viable but nonculturable state using direct plate counts and recognition of individual gene fluorescence in situ hybridization. J. Microbiol. Meth. 85:114-118.

57. Johnson, C.N., J.C. Bowers, K.J. Griffitt, V. Molina, R.W. Clostio, S. Pei, E. Laws, R.N. Paranjpye, M.S. Strom, A. Chen, N.A. Hasan, A. Huq, N.F. Noriea III, D.J. Grimes and R.R. Colwell. 2012. Ecology of Vibrio parahaemolyticus and Vibrio vulnificus in the coastal and estuarine waters of Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, and Washington (United States). Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 78:7249-7257.

58. Griffitt, K.J. and D.J. Grimes. 2013. Abundance and distribution of Vibrio cholerae, V. parahaemolyticus, and V. vulnificus following a major freshwater intrusion into the Mississippi Sound. Microb. Ecol. 65:578-583. DOI 10.1007/s00248-013-0203-659.

59. Griffitt, K.J. and D.J. Grimes. 2013. A novel agar formulation for isolation and direct enumeration of Vibrio vulnificus from oyster tissue. J. Microbiol. Meth. 94:98-102. doi: 10.1016/j.mimet.2013.04.0121.

60. Berutti, T.R., R.E. Williams, S. Shen, M.M. Taylor and D.J. Grimes. 2014. Prevalence of urease in Vibrio parahaemolyticus from the Mississippi Sound. Lett. Appl. Microbiol. 58:624-628. doi: 10.1111/lam.12237

61. Grimes, D.J., T.E. Ford, R.R. Colwell, C. Baker-Austin, J. Martinez-Urtaza, A. Subramaniam and D.G. Capone. 2014. Viewing marine bacteria, their activity and response to environmental drivers from orbit. Microb. Ecol. 67:489-500. doi: 10.1007/s00248-013-0363-4

62. Hasan, N.A., T. Rezayat, P.J. Blatz, S.Y. Choi, K.J. Griffitt, S.M. Rashed, A. Huq, N.G. Conger, R.R. Colwell and D.J. Grimes. 2015. Nontoxigenic Vibrio cholerae non-Ol/O139 isolate from a case of human gastroenteritis in the U.S. Gulf Coast. J. Clin. Microbiol. 53:9-14. doi: 10.1128/JCM.02187-14

63. Torralba, M.G., J. Franks, A. Gomez, S. Yooseph, K.E. Nelson and D.J. Grimes. 2017. Effect of Macondo Prospect 252 oil on microbiota associated with pelagic Sargassum in the northern Gulf of Mexico. Microb. Ecol. 73:91-100. doi:10.1007/s00248-016-0857-y

Publications (journal articles in preparation and/or submitted):Russo, C.D., M. Torralba, K.E. Nelson, D. Revie, J. Badger, R.S. Wells and D.J. Grimes. 2017.

A viromic study of serum collected from wild Tursiops truncatus (bottlenose dolphin) and report of the first marine system lentivirus with high relatedness to HIV-1. (mss. in preparation for Lancet)

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Russo, C.D., D. Weller, K.E. Nelson, S. Chivers, M. Torralba and D.J. Grimes. 2017. https://seaworld.org/en/animal-info/animal-infobooks/bottlenose-dolphins/habitat-and-distribution (mss. submitted, reviewed and resubmitted to Microb. Eccol.)

Russo, C.D., R. Griffitt, K. Lefebvre, M. Torralba, K.E. Nelson and D.J. Grimes. 2017. Bacteriomic and transcriptomic regulation in Zebrafish exposed to varying concentrations of the harmful algal bloom toxin domoic acid. (mss. in preparation for )

Russo, C.D. and D.J. Grimes. 2017. A review of viral species reported to be infectious for Tursiops truncatus (bottlenose dolphin). (submitted, reviewed, in revision)

Shen, S., M. Taylor, S.L. Allen, H. Nguyen, R.C. Prince and D.J. Grimes. 2017. Hydrocarbon degradation by Vibrios. (mss. in preparation)

Shen, S. and D.J. Grimes. 2017. Vibrio dioxygenases. (mss. in preparation)Grimes, D.J., S. Shen, A.R. Flowers, A. Bardon-Albaret, R.B. Blaylock and J.M. Lotz. 2017.

Vibrio vulnificus mortality in cultured red snapper. (mss. in preparation for J. Aquatic Animal Health)

Publications (books, chapters, proceedings, newsletters & book reviews):1. Burns, R.M. and D.J. Grimes. 1979. Laboratory Manual for General Bacteriology. Gorsuch

Scarisbrick, Publ., Dubuque.

2. Colwell, R.R. and D.J. Grimes. 1983. Microbiological/chemical hazards to divers in polluted waters. In Protection of Divers in Waters Containing Hazardous Chemicals, Pathogenic Organisms, and Radioactive Materials, Undersea Medical Society, Publ. No. CR60 (CW), Bethesda, MD.

3. Singleton, F.L., D.J. Grimes and R.R. Colwell. 1984. Autochthony of bacterial communities in ocean surface waters as an indicator of pollution, p. 443-469. In H. White (ed.), Concepts in Marine Pollution Measurements. Maryland Sea Grant College, University of Maryland, College Park.

4. Singleton, F.L., D.J. Grimes, H.-S. Xu and R.R. Colwell. 1985. Microbiological studies of ocean dumping, p. 187-208. In D.R. Kester, W.V. Burt, J.M. Capuzzo, P.K. Park, B.H. Ketchum, and I.W. Duedall (ed.), Wastes in the Ocean, Vol. 5, Deep-Sea Waste Disposal. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York.

5. Grimes, D.J. 1985. Microbiological studies of municipal waste release to aquatic environments, p. 270-276. In P.J. Godfrey, E.R. Kaynor, S. Pelczarski, and J. Benforado (eds.), Ecological Considerations in Wetlands Treatment of Municipal Wastewaters. Van Nostrand Reinhold Co., New York.

6. Colwell, R., P. Brayton, M. Tamplin, S. Huq, M. Voll, D. Roszak, S. Muralidhar, C. Somerville and J. Grimes. 1985. Pathogenic potential, including production of cholera toxin, in viable but not recoverable Vibrio cholerae 01 in environmental microcosms. In: Proceedings of 21st Joint Conference on Cholera, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, October, 1985.

7. Colwell, R.R. and D.J. Grimes. 1986. Evidence for genetic modification of microorganisms occurring in natural aquatic environments, p. 222-230. In T.M. Poston and R. Purdy (ed.),

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Aquatic Toxicology and Environmental Fate, 9th vol., ASTM Special Technical Publ. 921, American Society for Testing and Materials, Philadelphia.

8. Okpokwasili, G.C., D.J. Grimes and R.R. Colwell. 1986. The role of plasmids in degradation of phenanthrene by bacteria isolated from the estuarine environment, p. 2-8. In S. Barry, D.R. Houghton, G.C. Llewellyn, and C.E. O'Rear (ed.), Biodeterioration 6. C.A.B. Inter-national, Farnham Royal, Slough, UK.

9. Okpokwasili, G.C., C.C. Somerville, D.J. Grimes and R.R. Colwell. 1986. Plasmid-associated phenanthrene degradation by Chesapeake Bay sediment bacteria, p. 601-610. In Deuxieme Colloque International de Bacteriologie Marine - CNRS, IFREMER, Acte de Colloques, 3, Brest, France.

10. Brayton, P.R., D.B. Roszak, L.M. Palmer, S.A. Huq, D.J. Grimes and R.R. Colwell. 1986. Fluorescent antibody enumeration of Vibrio cholerae in the marine environment, p. 507-514. In Deuxieme Colloque International de Bacteriologie Marine - CNRS, IFREMER, Acte de Colloques, 3, Brest, France.

11. Grimes, D.J. 1986. Human pathogens associated with elasmobranchs and other marine animals, p. 417-421. In F. Megusar and M. Gantar (eds.), Perspectives in Microbial Ecology, Proceedings of the Fourth International Symposium on Microbial Ecology, Ljubljana, Yugoslavia.

12. Grimes, D.J., C.C. Somerville, W. Straube, D.B. Roszak, B.A. Ortiz-Conde, M.T. MacDonell and R.R. Colwell. 1988. Plasmid mobility in the ocean environment, p. 37-42. In W.J. Adams, G.A. Chapman, and W.G. Landis (ed.), Aquatic Toxicology and Hazard Assessment, l0th vol., ASTM Special Technical Publ. 971, American Society for Testing and Materials, Philadelphia.

13. Grimes, D.J. and R.R. Colwell. 1989. Ocean discharge of industrial and domestic wastewater at Barceloneta, Puerto Rico: bacteriological considerations, (p. 139-148). In D. Hood, A. Schoener, and P.K. Park (eds.), Ocean Processes in Marine Pollution, Vol. 4, Robert E. Krieger Publ. Co., Malabar, FL.

14. Grimes, D.J. 1990. Review of human pathogenic bacteria in marine animals with emphasis on sharks, p. 63-69. In H.L. Pratt, S.H. Gruber, and T. Taniuchi (eds.), Elasmobranchs as Living Resources: Advances in Biology, Ecology, Systematics, and the Status of the Fisheries. NOAA Tech. Rep. NMFS 90.

15. Grimes, D.J. and R.R. Colwell. 1990. Estuarine science and public health. Marine Division, National Association of State Universities & Land-Grant Colleges, Washington, D.C.

16. O'Neill, K.R., S.H. Jones, T.L. Howell and D.J. Grimes. 1991. Occurrence of Vibrio vulnificus in water and shellfish from Maine and New Hampshire, p. 189-193. In W.S. Otwell, G.E. Rodrick, and R.E. Martin (eds.), Molluscan Shellfish Depuration. CRC Press, Inc., Boca Raton, FL.

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17. Grimes, D.J. 1994. Issues and opportunities in bioremediation research. Proceedings of the Fallen Leaf Lake Conference on Microbial Ecology and Biological Control. Molec. Ecol. 3:617-618.

18. Grimes, D.J. and G. Heufelder. 1994. Pathogen issues in Buzzards Bay, p. 1-58. In J.E. Costa, V. Gibson and J.M. Pederson (eds.), A Synthesis of Pollutant Inputs to Buzzards Bay. Buzzards Bay Project, Technical Report Series (BBP 94-30). U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and Massachusetts Executive Office of Environmental Affairs, Boston, MA.

19. Grimes, D.J. 1995. Culture collections and nonculturable cells. USFCC Newsletter 25(1):1-3.

20. Grimes, D.J. 1995. Validation of reliability and predictability of environmental biotechnologies, p. 309-315. In H. Uchida (Chair), Bioremediation: the Tokyo '94 Workshop (Proceedings of an OECD Workshop held in Tokyo, Japan, November, 1994). Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, Paris, France.

21. Grimes, D.J. 1997. Environmental biotechnology issues in the federal government, p. 147-152. In G.S. Sayler, J. Sanseverino, and K.L. Davis (eds.), Biotechnology in the Sustainable Environment. Plenum Publ. Corp., New York.

22. Grimes, D.J. 1998. Biotechnology and the environment, p. 731-741. In A. Altman (ed.), Agricultural Biotechnology. Marcel Dekker, Inc., New York.

23. Grimes, D.J. 1999. Forum: Water we count on. New Scientist 161(2171):46.

24. Colwell, R.R. and D.J. Grimes (eds.). 2000. Nonculturable Microorganisms in the Environment. ASM Press, Washington, D.C.

25. Colwell, R.R. and D.J. Grimes. 2000. Semantics and strategies, p. 1-6. In R.R. Colwell and D.J. Grimes (eds.), Nonculturable Microorganisms in the Environment. ASM Press, Washington, D.C.

26. Grimes, D.J., A.L. Mills and K.H. Nealson. 2000. The importance of viable but nonculturable bacteria in biogeochemistry, p. 209-227. In R.R. Colwell and D.J. Grimes (eds.), Nonculturable Microorganisms in the Environment. ASM Press, Washington, D.C.

27. Grimes, D.J. 2002. Sources, distribution, and conveyance of opportunistic pathogens in estuaries and the oceans, p. 1-9. In R.L. Creswell (ed.), Proceedings of the Gulf and Caribbean Fisheries Institute.

28. M.R. Winfrey, M.A. Rott, S.J. Anglehart, W.R. Schwan, B.C. Taylor, R.M. Burns and D.J. Grimes. 2004. Laboratory Manual for Fundamentals of Microbiology. University of Wisconsin-La Crosse and The University of Southern Mississippi.

29. Lotz, J.M., R.M. Overstreet and D.J. Grimes. 2005. Aquaculture and animal pathogens in the marine environment with emphasis on marine shrimp viruses, p. 431-451. In S. Belkin

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and R.R. Colwell (eds.), Pathogenic Microorganisms in the Sea. Kluwer/Plenum, New York.

30. Grimes, D.J. 2009. Book review: P.J. Walsh, S.L. Smith, L.E. Fleming, H.M. Solo-Gabriele and W.H. Gerwick (eds.). 2008. Oceans and Human Health: Risk and Remedies from the Sea, 672 pp. Elsevier, Inc., St. Louis. In Environ. Health Perspect. 117:124.

31. Grimes, D.J. (ed.). 2012. Encyclopedia of Sustainability Science and Technology: Oceans and Human Health. Springer, Heidelberg, Germany.

32. Grimes, D.J. 2012. Introduction, In D.J. Grimes (ed.), Encyclopedia of Sustainability Science and Technology: Oceans and Human Health. Springer, Heidelberg, Germany.

33. Grimes, D.J., L.W. Plano and O. Ekenna. 2012. Human bacterial diseases from the ocean, In D.J. Grimes (ed.), Encyclopedia of Sustainability Science and Technology: Oceans and Human Health. Springer, Heidelberg, Germany.

34. Grimes, D.J., M.T. Hamann, J.M. Lotz, T.I. McLean, T. McIlwain and C.H. Price. 2012. Oceans and human health: social and economic impacts, In D.J. Grimes (ed.), Encyclopedia of Sustainability Science and Technology: Oceans and Human Health. Springer, Heidelberg, Germany.

35. Kanki, P. and D.J. Grimes (eds.). 2013. Infectious Diseases. Springer, Heidelberg, Germany.

36. Grimes, D.J., L.W. Plano and O. Ekenna. 2013. Human bacterial diseases from the ocean, In P. Kanki and D.J. Grimes (eds.), Infectious Diseases. Springer, Heidelberg, Germany.

Papers and Posters Presented:1. Grimes, D.J. 1971. Insecticide bioconcentration by aquatic bacteria, Annual Meeting of the

American Society for Microbiology. Bacteriol. Proc. 71:G56. Minneapolis.

2. Grimes, D.J. 1974. Release of sediment-bound fecal coliforms by dredging. Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology. Abstracts. 74:G201. Chicago.

3. Madramootoo, S. and D.J. Grimes. 1976. Distribution of Pseudomonas aeruginosa in Navigation Pool 8 of the Upper Mississippi River. North Central Branch ASM Meeting.

4. Sherman, L. and D.J. Grimes. 1976. Bacterial flora in Navigation Pool 8 of the Upper Mississippi River. North Central Branch ASM Meeting.

5. Grimes, D.J. and M.A. Plzak. 1978. Microbiological water quality effects of dredging polluted Upper Mississippi River bottom sediments. Annual Meeting of the American Society of Microbiology. Abstracts. 78:Q91. Las Vegas.

6. LaLiberte, P.J. and D.J. Grimes. 1979. In situ survival of Escherichia coli in lake bottom sediments. North Central Branch ASM Meeting.

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7. Mach, P.A. and D.J. Grimes. 1979. Transmission of antibiotic resistance in a wastewater treatment plant. North Central Branch ASM Meeting.

8. Youngren, B.L. and D.J. Grimes. 1979. Rapid preliminary diagnosis of anaerobic infections using direct gas-liquid chromatography of animal models and clinical specimens. North Central Branch ASM Meeting.

9. Mach, P.A. and D.J. Grimes. 1980. Transmission of antibiotic resistance in a wastewater treatment plant. Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology. Abstracts. 80:N91. Miami Beach.

10. Singleton, F.L., D.J. Grimes, H.-S. Xu, and R.R. Colwell. 1981. Microbial studies of ocean dumping. Third International Ocean Disposal Symposium, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute.

11. Grimes, D.J., F.L. Singleton, and R.R. Colwell. 1982. Microbial ecology studies related to effects of ocean dumping. Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology. Abstracts. 82:Q68. Atlanta.

12. Youngren, B.L. and D.J. Grimes. 1982. Volatile fatty acid production by anaerobes: an in vivo and in vitro comparison. Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology. Abstracts. 82:B102. Atlanta.

13. Okpokwasili, G., D.J. Grimes, and R.R. Colwell. 1982. Plasmid-mediated degradation of phenanthrene by bacteria isolated from Chesapeake Bay. XIII International Congress of Microbiology, Boston.

14. Grimes, D.J., F.L. Singleton, and R.R. Colwell. 1982. Bacteria as indicators of marine pollution. Workshop on Meaningful Measures of Marine Pollution Effects, Pensacola.

15. Grimes, D.J., F.L. Singleton, and R.R. Colwell. 1982. Microbial indicators of ocean pollution. Bacteriologie Marine Colloque International C.N.R.S., Marseille, France.

16. Grimes, D.J. and R.R. Colwell. 1983. Ocean discharge of industrial and domestic wastewater: Bacteriological effects. Fourth International Ocean Disposal Symposium, Plymouth Polytechnic, Plymouth, England.

17. Grimes, D.J., D. Roszak-MacDonell, and R.R. Colwell. 1983. Fate of enteric pathogens in the estuarine environment. Third International Symposium on Microbial Ecology, Michigan State University, East Lansing.

18. Baya, A., D.J. Grimes, A.T. Wortman, and R.R. Colwell. 1983. A survey of plasmids in deep sea bacteria resistant to toxic chemicals. Third International Symposium on Microbial Ecology, Michigan State University, East Lansing.

19. Grimes, D.J. and R.R. Colwell. 1983. Survival of human pathogens in the marine environment. International Ocean Disposal Symposium, Ocean Waste Management:

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Policy and Strategies, University of Rhode Island.

20. Palmer, L.M., A.M. Baya, H.-S. Xu, and D.J. Grimes. 1983. Effects of toxic organic chemicals on survival of human pathogens in estuarine microcosms. Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology. Abstracts. 83:Q94. New Orleans.

21. Hill, G.A. and D.J. Grimes. 1983. Seasonal study of a freshwater lake for Campylobacter jejuni. Second Int. Workshop on Campylobacter Infections, Brussels, Belgium.

22. May, E.B., D.J. Grimes, R.T. Jones, J. Stemmler, F.M. Hetrick, and R.R. Colwell. 1983. A Vibrio infection in brown sharks (Carcharhinus plumbeus): biochemical characterization of two unique Vibrio species. 14th Annual Symposium of the International Association for Aquarium Animal Medicine, Long Beach, CA.

23. Grimes, D.J., R.R. Colwell, J. Stemmler, H. Hada, D. Maneval, F.M. Hetrick, E.B. May, R.T. Jones, and M. Stoskopf. 1983. Vibrio species as agents of Elasmobranch disease. Int. Helgoland Symp., Diseases of Marine Organisms, Helgoland, Federal Republic of Germany.

24. Colwell, R.R. and D.J. Grimes. 1983. Vibrio diseases of marine fish populations. Int. Helgoland Symp., Diseases of Marine Organisms, Helgoland, Federal Republic of Germany.

25. Wortman, A.T., A.M. Baya, D.J. Grimes, and R.R. Colwell. 1983. Numerical taxonomy of abyssal marine bacteria. The Seventh Annual Conference on Numerical Taxonomy, Ottawa, Canada.

26. Colwell, R.R., A.M. Baya, D.J. Grimes, L.M. Palmer, R.M. Weiner, and A.T. Wortman. 1983. Molecular genetic studies of marine bacteria. Microbial Adhesion and Corrosion in the Marine Environment, Agouron Institute, La Jolla, CA.

27. Youngren-Grimes, B.L., J.M. Capuzzo, D.J. Grimes, and R.R. Colwell. 1984. Culturing of marine vibrios under strict anaerobic conditions. Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Abstracts, 84:Q92, St. Louis.

28. Roszak, D.B., L.M. Palmer, D.J. Grimes and R.R. Colwell. 1984. Survival, viability and virulence studies of selected human pathogens in aquatic systems. Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Abstracts, 84:I21, St. Louis.

29. Wortman, A.T., A.M. Baya, W. Straube and D.J. Grimes. 1984. Plasmids in deep sea bacteria isolated from the digestive tract of amphipods. Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology. Abstracts, 84:H68, St. Louis.

30. Brayton, P., D. Roszak, S.A. Huq, D.J. Grimes, and R.R. Colwell. 1984. Public health significance of human pathogens in the ocean. OCEANS '84 Marine Pollution Sessions, Washington, D.C.

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31. Roszak, D.B., D.J. Grimes, and R.R. Colwell. 1984. Non-recoverable stage of Salmonella enteritidis and Campylobacter jejuni in nutrient-limited aquatic systems. Combined Branch Meeting, Maryland and Washington, D.C. Branches, American Society for Microbiology, Bethesda, MD.

32. Okpokwasili, G.C., D.J. Grimes and R.R. Colwell. 1984. The role of plasmids in degradation of phenanthrene by bacteria isolated from the estuarine environment. Sixth International Biodeterioration Symposium, Washington, D.C.

33. Brayton, P.R., D.B. Roszak, L.M. Palmer, S.A. Huq, D.J. Grimes and R.R. Colwell. 1984. Fluorescent antibody enumeration of Vibrio cholerae in the marine environment. Second International Colloquium of Marine Bacteriology, Brest, France.

34. Colwell, R.R., A. Huq, R. Weiner and D.J. Grimes. 1984. Association of Vibrio spp. with estuarine and marine invertebrates. Second International Colloquium of Marine Bacteriology, Brest, France.

35. Okpokwasili, G.C., C.C. Somerville, D.J. Grimes and R.R. Colwell. 1984. Plasmid-associated phenanthrene degradation by Chesapeake Bay sediment bacteria. Second International Colloquium of Marine Bacteriology, Brest, France.

36. Grimes, D.J., P. Brayton, S.H. Gruber and R.R. Colwell. 1984. Vibrio disease in captive sharks. First International Colloquium on Pathology in Marine Aquaculture, European Aquaculture Society, Montpellier, France.

37. Roszak, D.B., S.A. Huq, P.R. Brayton, L.M. Palmer, D.M. Rollins, D.J. Grimes and R.R. Colwell. 1984. Survival, viability and virulence studies of selected pathogens in aquatic systems of potential hazard to divers. NOAA's Undersea Research Symposium, University of Connecticut at Avery Point, Groton, Connecticut.

38. Grimes, D.J. and R.R. Colwell. 1984. Survival and virulence of allochthonous pathogenic and fecal indicator bacteria in the marine environment. Fifth International Ocean Disposal Symposium, Oregon State University, Corvallis.

39. Colwell, R.R., D. Roszak, P. Brayton, G. Alfredsson, and D.J. Grimes. 1985. Viable but nonculturable bacteria in the aquatic environment. Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Abstracts, 85:N64, Las Vegas.

40. Bode, R.B., P. Brayton, M.T. MacDonell, H.L. Hall, and D.J. Grimes. 1985. Description of a new Vibrio sp. as an etiologic agent of meningitis. Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Abstracts, 85:D65, Las Vegas.

41. Grimes, D.J., P.R. Brayton, B.L. Youngren-Grimes and S.H. Gruber. 1985. The autochthonous flora of neritic sharks. Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Abstracts, 85:I111, Las Vegas.

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42. Grimes, D.J., P. Brayton, B. Youngren-Grimes, M.T. MacDonell, M.V. Parsey, S.H. Gruber, and R.R. Colwell. 1985. The bacterial flora of sharks. 1st Annual Meeting of the American Elasmobranch Society, Knoxville, TN.

43. Huq, A., S.A. Huq, D.J. Grimes, and R.R. Colwell. 1985. Colonization of Vibrio cholerae to the hind gut of blue crab, Callinectes sapidus, and its effect on ion transport. 10th Annual Bangladesh Science Conference, Bangladesh Association for Advancement of Science, Bangladesh.

44. Colwell, R., P. Brayton, M. Tamplin, S. Huq, M. Voll, D. Roszak, S. Muralidhar, C. Somerville and J. Grimes. 1985. Pathogenic potential, including production of cholera toxin, in viable but not recoverable Vibrio cholerae 01 in environmental microcosms. Presented at 21st Joint Conference on Cholera, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, October, 1985.

45. Brayton, P.R., D.B. Roszak, S.A. Huq, L.M. Palmer, D.J. Grimes, and R.R. Colwell. 1986. Viable but non-culturable Vibrio cholerae and related pathogens in the environment. Washington, D.C. Branch ASM Meeting, Washington, D.C.

46. Youngren-Grimes, B.L., S.H. Gruber, and D.J. Grimes. 1986. Anaerobic bacteria in shark tissue. 2nd Annual Meeting of the American Elasmobranch Society, Victoria, British Columbia.

47. Brayton, P.R., M.L. Tamplin, D.J. Grimes, and R.R. Colwell. 1986. Purification and characterization of shark serum proteins which agglutinate bacteria of the family Vibrionaceae. 2nd Annual Meeting of the American Elasmobranch Society, Victoria, British Columbia.

48. Colwell, R., A. Pearson, D. Hussong, J. Dennis, J. Lee, J. Byrd, J. Grimes, M. Hood, C. Hutchinson, M. O'Brien, J. Stott, and J. Walker. 1986. Sources, colonization, amplification, and detection of Legionella in cooling towers and water heaters. XIV International Congress of Microbiology, Manchester, England.

49. Chapelle, F.H., J.L. Zelibor, Jr., D.J. Grimes, and L.L. Knobel. 1986. Anaerobic bacteria in cores from the St. Paul's test hole, Maryland: evidence for a microbial source of CO2. Chapman Conference on Microbial Processes in the Transport, Fate, and In- situ Treatment of Subsurface Contaminants, American Geophysical Union, Snowbird, Utah.

50. Knight, I.T. and D.J. Grimes. 1987. Use of 14C-urea to demonstrate bacterial ureolytic activity in tissues of neritic sharks. Washington, D.C. Branch ASM Meeting, College Park, MD.

51. Brayton, P.R., M.L. Tamplin, and D.J. Grimes. 1987. Purification and characterization of nurse shark antibodies and their agglutinating titers to aquatic bacteria. Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Abstracts, 87:N44, Atlanta.

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52. Knight, I.T. and D.J. Grimes. 1987. Use of [14C] urea to demonstrate bacterial ureolytic activity in tissues of neritic sharks. Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Abstracts, 87:I148, Atlanta.

53. Knight, I.T. and D.J. Grimes. 1987. Urea hydrolysis by bacteria in the liver of carcharhinid sharks. 3rd Annual Meeting of the American Elasmobranch Society, Albany, New York.

54. Colwell, R.R., J.L. Zelibor, Jr., M. Tamplin, and D. J. Grimes. 1987. Detection and enumeration of metal resistant bacteria and correlation with presence of metals in the environment. Heavy Metals in the Environment Conf., New Orleans.

55. Grimes, D.J. 1987. Near-shore Versus Deep-Sea Disposal of Wastes and Dredged Materials Contaminated with Pathogenic Bacteria, 7th International Ocean Disposal Symposium, Wolfville, Nova Scotia.

56. Youngren-Grimes, B. and D.J. Grimes. 1988. Numerical taxonomy of Clostridium spp. isolated from sharks. Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Abstracts, 88:R8, p.239. Miami.

57. O'Neill, K.R., S.H. Jones, T.L. Howell, and D.J. Grimes. 1989. Occurrence of Vibrio vulnificus in water and shellfish from Maine and New Hampshire. First International Conference on Molluscan Shellfish Depuration, Orlando, FL.

58. Jones, S.H., C.A. Penniman, and D.J. Grimes. 1990. The impact of bacterial and nutrient loading from high-volume runoff events on water quality in Great Bay. Earth and Environment: Research at UNH, Earth Day 1990 Conf., Durham, NH.

59. O'Neill, K.R., S.H. Jones, and D.J. Grimes. 1990. Influence of salinity and temperature on the occurrence of Vibrio vulnificus in Northern New England water and oysters. Earth and Environment: Research at UNH, Earth Day 1990 Conf., Durham, NH.

60. O'Neill, K., S. Jones, and D.J. Grimes. 1990. Effect of salinity and temperature on the presence of Vibrio vulnificus in Northern New England water and oysters. Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Abstracts, 90:Q95, Anaheim, CA.

61. O'Neill, K.R., S.H. Jones, and D.J. Grimes. 1991. Hemolysin-negative strains of Vibrio vulnificus. Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Abstracts, 91:Q153, p. 302, Dallas, TX.

62. Jones, S.H., K.R. O'Neill, T.L. Howell, R. Langan, A.B. Margolin, and D.J. Grimes. 1991. The incidence and elimination of vibrios and fecal-borne bacteria from Northern New England oysters. Annual Meeting of the National Shellfisheries Association, Abstracts, p. 277, Portland, ME.

63. Attaway, D.H. and D.J. Grimes. 1994. Perspectives on marine biotechnology in the U.S. Government. 3rd International Marine Biotechnology Conference, Tromso, Norway.

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64. Olsen, G.J. and D.J. Grimes. 1995. The Microbial Genome Initiative: Developing genomic information for the pursuit of energy, environmental, and industrial goals. International Symposium on the Exploration of Microbial Diversity, Goslar, Germany.

65. Asper, V.L. and D.J. Grimes. 1999. The IX 508: A “new” research vessel for the University of Southern Mississippi. Miss. Acad. Sciences, Abstracts, p. 79, Tupelo, MS.

66. Grimes, D.J. 1999. Towards a new focus on measuring human health risks in the ocean. AAAS Annual Meeting, Anaheim, CA.

67. Atlas, R.M. and D.J. Grimes. 1999. Valuing international coordination of biological resource centers. OECD Workshop Tokyo ‘99 on Scientific and Technological Infrastructure (Support for Biological Resource Centers), Tokyo, Japan.

68. Grimes, D.J. and D. Rebarchik. 2000. Measuring human health risks in the Gulf of Mexico. Gulf of Mexico Symposium 2000, Mobile, AL.

69. Grimes, D.J. 2000. Powerful new technologies: Do they really exist and do we need them? Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Abstracts, AAM Special Interest Session 94, Los Angeles, CA.

70. Grimes, D.J. 2000. Oceans in human health. Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Abstracts, AAM Roundtable 239, Los Angeles, CA.

71. Grimes, D.J. 2000. Sources, distribution, and conveyance of opportunistic pathogens in estuaries and the oceans. 53rd Annual Meeting of the Gulf and Caribbean Fisheries Institute, Biloxi, MS.

72. Chang, Y., A.M. Peacock, S. Barnes, J. Ogle, D.J. Grimes, and D.C. White. 2001. Microbial community shifts in water, foregut, and hindgut during the 50 day growth cycle of the white shrimp Litopenaeus vannamei in mariculture. Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Abstracts, 263/Z, Z-30, Orlando, FL.

73. Grimes, D.J. 2001. Biological resource centers: Challenges for developing a global network. Annual Meeting of the Society for General Microbiology, St. Louis, MO.

74. Grimes, D. J., J. Franks, H. Perry. 2002. Fisheries research at the College of Marine Sciences, The University of Southern Mississippi. Joint Annual Meeting of the Mississippi and Louisiana Chapters, American Fisheries Society, Biloxi, MS.

75. Phillips, A.M.B., D.J. Grimes, and J.L. Williams. 2002. Viable but nonculturable Escherichia coli: A study comparing the direct viable count procedure with membrane filtration for total E. coli agar enumeration. Annual Meeting of the Mississippi Academy of Sciences. Abstract in J. Miss. Acad. Sci. 47(1):56-57.

76. Phillips, A.M.B., D.J. Grimes, and J.L. Williams. 2002. Viable but nonculturable Escherichia coli: A study comparing the direct viable count procedure with the mTEC Agar

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enumeration method. Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Abstracts, Q-339, p. 437, Salt Lake City, UT.

77. Grimes, D.J., D.M. Rebarchik, R. Hanson, R.A. Krol, and V.L. Asper. 2002. Bacteria associated with gelatinous zooplankton. Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Abstracts, N-183, p. 336, Salt Lake City, UT.

78. Ellender, R.D., S. Wang, B. Middlebrooks, D.J. Grimes, D. Rebarchik. 2002. Bacterial source tracking. U.S. EPA Gulf of Mexico Program Policy Review Board Meeting, New Orleans, LA.

79. Ellender, R.D., B. Middlebrooks, S. Wang, D. Rebarchik, D.J. Grimes. 2002. Animal Source Tracking: A complement to microbial source tracking. U.S. EPA-Southern California Water Research Project-National Water Research Institute-California State Water Resources Control Board Microbiological Source Tracking Workshop, Irvine, CA.

80. Ellender, R.D., B. Middlebrooks, S. Wang, D. Rebarchik, and D.J. Grimes. 2002. Bacterial source tracking in MS waters. 32nd Annual Meeting, MS Water Resources Research Institute, Jackson, MS.

81. Robinson, B.J., R.D. Ellender, S.Y. Wang, W.M. Hassan, D. Rebarchik, B. Middlebrooks, and D.J. Grimes. 2003. The development of bacterial source tracking antibiotic resistance analysis (ARA) database of E. coli and enterococcus isolates from South Mississippi. Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Abstracts, Q-348, p. 119, Washington, D.C.

82. Phillips, A.M.B., A. DePaolo, J. Bowers, S. Ladner, J. Krantz, G. Blackstone, and D.J. Grimes. 2005. Using remote sensing for the investigation of Vibrio parahaemolyticus in Gulf Coast oysters (Crassostrea virginica) and overlying waters for risk assessment. Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Abstracts, Q-348, p. , Atlanta, GA.

83. Phillips, A.M.B., A. DePaola, J. Bowers, S. Ladner, J. Krantz, G. Blackstone, and D.J. Grimes. 2005. Using remote sensing for investigation of Vibrio parahaemolyticus in Gulf Coast oysters (Crassostrea virginica) and overlying waters for risk assessment. Poster at the Molluscan Shellfish Safety Workshop, Point Clear, AL.

84. Phillips, A.M.B., A. DePaola, J. Bowers, S. Ladner, J. Krantz, G. Blackstone, and D.J. Grimes. 2005. Using remote sensing for investigation of Vibrio parahaemolyticus in Gulf Coast oysters (Crassostrea virginica) and overlying waters for risk assessment. Poster at the Connecting the Gulf of Mexico and Human Health Workshop, Long Beach, MS.

85. Phillips, A.M.B., A. DePaola, G. Carter, J. Bowers, J. Krantz, S. Ladner, R. Gould, and D.J. Grimes. 2005. Investigating Vibrio parahaemolyticus in Gulf Coast water and underlying oysters (Crassostrea virginica). Biennial Conference of the Estuarine Research Foundation, Norfolk, VA.

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86. Grimes, D.J. 2005. Koch’s postulates – then and now. Presented in a symposium entitled “From Postulates to Posterity: Why Robert Koch is Still Revered and Reviled” honoring the 100th anniversary of Robert Koch’s Nobel Prize in Medicine at the Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Atlanta, GA.

87. Grimes, D.J., W.E. Hawkins, and R. Duhe. 2006. MAS Community Forum: The Mississippi Academy of Sciences and the Post-Katrina Recovery of the Gulf Coast Research Laboratory. Mississippi Academy of Sciences 70th Annual Meeting, Vicksburg, MS.

88. Phillips, A.M.B., A. DePaola, J. Bowers, S. Ladner, J. Krantz, G. Blackstone, C. Johnson, A. Russell, and D.J. Grimes. 2006. Use of remotely sensed parameters to predict levels of Vibrio parahaemolyticus in Gulf Coast water and underlying oysters (Crassostrea virginica). Ocean Sciences Meeting, Paper OS25M-14, Honolulu, HI.

89. Grimes, D.J., C.N. Johnson, and A.D. Russell. 2007. Tracking pathogens from space: Risk assessment to predict seafood contamination. In: Wave of the Future: Predicting Human Health Threats in Our Oceans, AAAS Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA.

90. Russell, A., C.N. Johnson, J. Bowers, A. DePaola, and D.J. Grimes. 2007. Correlations between densities of Vibrio parahaemolyticus, V. vulnificus, and plankton in the Mississippi Sound. Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Abstracts, Q-545, Toronto, Canada.

91. Johnson, C.N., A. Russell, A.M.B. Phillips, J. Bowers, and D.J. Grimes. 2007. Correlations between Vibrio spp. in the Northern Gulf of Mexico and environmental parameters. Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Abstracts, Q-544, Toronto, Canada.

92. Grimes, D.J., A. Russell, and C.N. Johnson. 2007. Distribution of culturable Vibrio parahaemolyticus and V. vulnificus in coastal habitats of the Mississippi Sound: Bacterial reservoirs in sedimentary habitats. Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Abstracts, N-264, Toronto, Canada.

93. Russell, A., C.N. Johnson, and D.J. Grimes. 2007. Distribution of culturable Vibrio parahaemolyticus and V. vulnificus in coastal habitats of the Mississippi Sound: bacterial reservoirs in sedimentary habitats. Marine and Estuarine Graduate Student Association, Graduate Student Symposium, The University of Southern Mississippi, Gulf Coast Research Laboratory, Ocean Springs, MS.

94. Johnson, C.N., A. Russell, A.M.B. Phillips, J. Bowers, and D.J. Grimes. 2007. Correlations between Vibrio spp. in the Northern Gulf of Mexico and Environmental Parameters, Letters Day, The University of Southern Mississippi, Hattiesburg, MS.

95. Nordstrom, J.L., A.M.B. Zimmerman, S. Parveen, S. Murray, D.J. Grimes, and A. DePaola. 2007. Application of a multiplex real-time PCR assay for detection of total and pathogenic Vibrio parahaemolyticus in oysters. CFSAN Science Day, College Park, MD.

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96. DePaola, A., J. Nordstrom, G. Blackstone, S. Longan, S. Parveen, A. Zimmerman, D.J. Grimes and J. Krantz. 2007. Application of molecular methods to determine Vibrio parahaemolyticus levels in--in oyster and potential role in establishing control measures and assessing their effectiveness. Vibrio 2007 – The Biology of Vibrios, Paris, France.

97. Johnson, C.N., A. R. Flowers, V. C. Young, N. Gonzalez-Escalona, A. DePaola, and D.J. Grimes. 2007. Genetic relatedness among tdh+ and trh+ Vibrio parahaemolyticus cultured from Gulf of Mexico oysters (Crassostrea virginica) and surrounding water and sediment. Vibrio 2007 – The Biology of Vibrios, Paris, France.

98. Johnson, C.N., A. R. Flowers, V. C. Young, N. Gonzalez-Escalona, A. DePaola, and D.J. Grimes. 2007. Genetic relatedness among tdh+ and trh+ Vibrio parahaemolyticus cultured from Gulf of Mexico oysters (Crassostrea virginica) and surrounding water and sediment. 42nd Conference: Cholera and Other Bacterial Enteric Infections, U.S.-Japan Cooperative Medical Science Program, Austin, TX.

99. Grimes, D.J. et al. (19 co-authors). 2008. Oceans and Human Health – Education and training. Joint Annual Meeting of the NSF/NIEHS and NOAA Centers of Excellence in Oceans and Human Health, Honolulu, HI.

100. Johnson, C.N., N. Noriea, and D. J. Grimes. 2008. Molecular and phylogenetic characterization of Vibrio parahaemolyticus carrying pathogenicity markers for thermostable direct hemolysin (tdh), tdh-related hemolysin, and type three secretion systems 1 and 2. Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Abstracts, B-192, Boston, MA.

101. Grimes, D.J., A. M. Zimmerman, C. N. Johnson, A. R. Flowers, A. DePaola, J. Bowers, R. W. Gould, and S. Ladner. 2008. Forecasting human health risk from marine vibrios using satellite data. ASLO Summer Meeting, Session SS06, St. John’s, Newfoundland.

102. Grimes, D.J. 2008. Modeling and forecasting Vibrio abundance and distribution. Gordon Research Conference in Oceans and Human Health, Tilton School, Tilton, NH.

103. Johnson, C. N., A.R. Flowers, N.F. Noriea, III, A.M. Zimmerman, J.C. Bowers, A. DePaola, and D.J. Grimes. 2009. Relationships between environmental factors and vibrio-specific gene markers in pathogenic vibrios from the northern Gulf of Mexico. American Society for Microbiology General Meeting, Abstracts, Q-155, Philadelphia, PA.

104. Noriea, III, N. F., C.N. Johnson, and D.J. Grimes. 2009. Distributions of type three secretion systems associated with thermolabile hemolysin (tlh), thermostable direct hemolysin (tdh), and the tdh-related hemolysin (trh) in Vibrio parahaemolyticus isolated from the Mississippi Sound. American Society for Microbiology General Meeting, Abstracts, Q-175, Philadelphia, PA.

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105. Holiday, D., J.C. Bowers, G.A. Carter, S. Loehrer, A. DePaola, C.N. Johnson, and D.J. Grimes. 2009. Creation of a website based on remote sensing to nowcast the abundance and distribution of vibrios in the coastal ocean. Oceans and Human Health Principal Investigators Meeting, Seattle, WA.

106. Griffitt, K.J., N.F. Noriea III, C.N. Johnson, and D.J. Grimes. 2009. Enumeration of Vibrio parahaemolyticus in the viable but nonculturable state using direct viable counts and recognition of individual gene fluorescence in situ hybridization. South Central Branch Meeting, American Society for Microbiology, Thibodaux, LA.

107. Berutti, T., R. Cooley and D.J. Grimes. 2009. Prevalence of urease in Vibrio parahaemolyticus. South Central Branch Meeting, American Society for Microbiology, Thibodaux, LA.

108. Noriea, N.F., III, C.N. Johnson, K.J. Griffitt, and D.J. Grimes. 2009. Distribution of type three secretion systems in Vibrio parahaemolyticus isolated from the Northern Gulf of Mexico. South Central Branch Meeting, American Society for Microbiology, Thibodaux, LA.

109. Grimes, D.J. and J. Trtanj. 2009. Forecasting human health risks associated with oyster consumption. American Public Health Association Annual Meeting, Philadelphia, PA.

110. Grimes, D.J., C.N. Johnson, G.A. Carter, C.D. Castillo, and C.M. Hall. 2009. Remote sensing to assess microbial water quality at beaches and shellfish beds. NASA Applied Sciences Gulf Workshop, New Orleans, LA.

111. Flowers, A.R., C.N. Johnson and D.J. Grimes. 2010. Culturable Vibrio parahaemolyticus and V. vulnificus in coastal marine sediments. American Society for Microbiology General Meeting, Abstracts, N-1796/714, San Diego, CA.

112. Hasan, N.A., A. Chen, S. Harvey, D. White, R. McKay, M. Tarnowski, K. Brohawn, C.N. Johnson, D.J. Grimes, A. Huq and R.R. Colwell. 2010. Environmental investigations of Vibrio parahaemolyticus, V. vulnificus and V. cholerae in oyster, water and sediment in the Chesapeake Bay. American Society for Microbiology General Meeting, Abstracts, N-1805/723, San Diego, CA.

113. Johnson, C.N., V. Molina, S. Pei, E. Laws, N.F. Noriea, III, K.J. Griffitt, A. Flowers, D.J. Grimes, J. Bowers, R. Paranjpye, M.S. Strom, N.A. Hasan, A. Huq and R.R. Colwell. 2010. Identifying environmental determinants favorable for the presence and transmission of pathogenic Vibrios. American Society for Microbiology General Meeting, Abstracts, N-1806/724, San Diego, CA.

114. Griffitt, K.J., N.F. Noriea, III, C.N. Johnson and D.J. Grimes. 2010. Enumeration of Vibrio parahaemolyticus in the viable but nonculturable state using direct viable counts and recognition of individual gene fluorescent in situ hybridization. American Society for Microbiology General Meeting, Abstracts, Q-2392/805, San Diego, CA.

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115. Griffitt, K.J., A.R. Flowers and D.J. Grimes. 2010. A new selective agar for direct enumeration and isolation of Vibrio vulnificus from the environment. South Central Branch Meeting, American Society for Microbiology, USM, Hattiesburg, MS.

116. Noriea, N.F., III and D.J. Grimes. 2010. Variability of cytotoxicity in strains of Vibrio parahaemolyticus exposed to oyster (Crassostrea virginica) hemocytes. South Central Branch Meeting, American Society for Microbiology, USM, Hattiesburg, MS.

117. Griffitt, K.J. and D.J. Grimes. 2011. Incidence and characterization of Vibrio cholerae in Mississippi coastal waters. American Society for Microbiology General Meeting, Abstracts, Q-1431/124, New Orleans, LA.

118. Noriea, N. and D.J. Grimes. 2011. Survivability in oyster hemocyte bactericidal assays of potentially pathogenic Vibrio parahaemolyticus isolated from the Mississippi Gulf Coast. American Society for Microbiology General Meeting, Abstracts, Q-1434/124, New Orleans, LA.

119. Rezayat, T., P. Blatz, N.G. Conger and D.J. Grimes. 2011. Non-O1 Vibrio cholerae in the Gulf Coast. Army and Air Force ACP Chapters, American College of Physicians, San Antonio, TX.

120. D.J. Grimes, S.L. Allen, H. Nguyen, A.R. Flowers, K.J. Griffitt, S. Shen, M.L. Pendleton. 2013. Petroleum metabolism by northern Gulf of Mexico Vibrios. Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill and Ecosystem Science Conference, New Orleans Marriott Hotel, New Orleans, LA.

121. D.J. Grimes. 2013. National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Gulf of Mexico Initiative ROSES Closeout Workshop, SpringHill Suites, New Orleans, LA.

122. Russo, C.D., K.E. Nelson, M. Torralba and D.J. Grimes. 2013. A viromics approach in the identification of RNA/DNA viral particles in the Tursiops truncatus (Bottlenose Dolphin) serum and blowhole swabs. American Society for Microbiology General Meeting, Session 33, Poster 401, Denver, CO.

123. Grimes, D.J., A.R. Flowers and S. Shen. 2013. Petroleum degradation by Northern Gulf of Mexico Vibrios. American Society for Microbiology General Meeting, Session 54, Poster 729, Denver, CO.

124. Russo, C.D., M. Torralba, K.E. Nelson and D.J. Grimes. 2013. A viromic study on wild Tursiops truncatus (bottlenose dolphin) collected serum. Joint South Central and Texas Branches Meeting, American Society for Microbiology, New Orleans, LA.

125. Grimes, D.J., R.B. Blaylock, J.M. Lotz and E.A.L. Saillant. 2014. Vibriosis in aquacultured red snapper. Vibrio 2014, Edinburgh, Scotland.

126. Grimes, D.J. and S. Shen. 2014. Petroleum degradation by northern Gulf of Mexico vibrios. Vibrio 2014, Edinburgh, Scotland.

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127. Chen, A., N. Hasan, M. Tarnowski, R. McKay, K. Brohawn, C. Johnson, D. Ceccarelli, D.J. Grimes, R. Colwell and A. Huq. 2014. Climate change and occurrence of clinically important vibrios in Chesapeake Bay, a potential threat to human health. Vibrio 2014, Edinburgh, Scotland.

128. Grimes, D.J., R.B. Blaylock*, J.M. Lotz and E.A.L. Saillant. 2014. Vibriosis in aquacultured red snapper. Seventh International Symposium on Aquatic Animal Health, 31 Aug – 4 Sept, Portland, OR.

129. Shen, S. and D.J. Grimes. 2015. Comparison of antibiotic and heavy metal resistance in bacteria isolated from Atlantic bottlenose dolphins inhabiting Barataria Bay, LA, and Sarasota Bay, FL. International Marine Microbiology Conference, Qingdao, China, 22-25 May 2015.

130. Russo, C.D., R. Griffitt, K. Lefebvre, M. Torralba, K. Nelson and D.J. Grimes. 2015. Bacteriomic and transcriptional regulation in zebrafish exposed to varying concentrations of the harmful algal bloom toxin domoic acid. American Society for Microbiology General Meeting, Session 209, Poster 2493, New Orleans, LA.

131. Shen, S. and D.J. Grimes. 2015. Comparison of antibiotic resistance in bacteria isolated from Atlantic bottlenose dolphins inhabiting Barataria Bay, LA, and Sarasota Bay, FL. American Society for Microbiology General Meeting, Session 023, Poster 278, New Orleans, LA

132. Russo, C.*, M. Torralba, K. Nelson, R. Wells and D.J. Grimes. 2015. A viromic study on serum collected from wild Tursiops truncatus (bottlenose dolphin). Fifth Florida Marine Mammal Health Conference. Gainesville, FL

Invited Papers and Presentations (if not listed, DJG was the sole author; otherwise the presenter is in bold):1. Microbiology of the Upper Mississippi River. Biology Department Seminar, University of Wisconsin-La Crosse, La Crosse, WI (1977)

2. Water pollution in the Upper Mississippi River. Logan High School Seminar, La Crosse, WI (1977)

3. Microbiology of the Upper Mississippi River. Biology Department Seminar, Viterbo College, La Crosse, WI (1978)

4. Plasmids and the evolution of infectious disease. Gundersen Clinic Infectious Diseases Conference, Gundersen Clinic, Ltd., La Crosse, WI (1980)

5. Microbiology of Mississippi mud. Microbiology Department Seminar, University of Maryland, College Park, MD (1982)

6. Microbiological studies of municipal waste release to aquatic environments. Workshop on

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Ecological Considerations in Wetlands Treatment of Municipal Wastewater, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA (1982)

7. Survival of pathogenic organisms in aquatic systems. Seminar on Water Quality in the Potomac River Estuary, USGS, Reston, VA (1982)

8. Microbial responses to ocean disposal of pharmaceutical wastes. Microbiology Department Seminar, University of Maryland at Baltimore, Baltimore, MD (1983)

9. Diving in polluted waters. SEAS '83, Diving Conf. and Underwater Film Festival, Raleigh, NC (1983)

10. The genus Vibrio and related sea stories. American Type Culture Collection Seminar, Rockville, MD (1983)

11. Yet smaller attackers of sharks. Honors Seminar ("Sharks and Their Relatives"), University of Maryland, College Park, MD (1984)

12. Identification and classification of bacteria associated with diseased and healthy sharks. Sharks: Recent Advances in Captive Biology, National Aquarium in Baltimore, Baltimore, MD (1985)

13. The genus Vibrio: Identification, classification, and ecology. District of Columbia Society for Medical Technology, Annual Seminar, George Washington University, Washington, D.C. (1985)

14. The microbiology of sharks. Ocean Research Institute, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan (1986)

15. Viable but non-culturable bacteria in marine and estuarine environments. Institute of Applied Microbiology, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan (1986)

16. Recent taxonomic discoveries and changes in the genus Vibrio. Division of Microbial Taxonomy, Institute of Applied Microbiology, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan (1986)

17. Marine microbial ecology: classical to biotechnological. Student Science Day, Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Washington, D.C. (1986)

18. Migration of plasmids in the ocean environment. Tenth Symposium on Aquatic Toxicology and Hazard Assessment, ASTM, New Orleans, LA (1986)

19. Viable but non-culturable bacteria. Microbiology Department Seminar, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA (1986)

20. Marine biotechnology. First Symposium of the American Association for the Advancement of Science - Caribbean Division, Marine Industries: Promising Future to Old and New Ventures, La Paguerra, Puerto Rico (1986)

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21. Human pathogens associated with elasmobranchs and other marine animals. 4th International Symposium on Microbial Ecology, Ljubljana, Yugoslavia (1986)

22. Microbial ecology of receiving waters. First Biotechnology Secretariat Meeting, American Chemical Society, Anaheim, CA (1986 - paper presented by F.L. Singleton)

23. Survival of human pathogens in sediments. 22nd Annual Joint Meeting of the Northeast, Connecticut Valley and Eastern New York Branches, American Society for Microbiology, Sturbridge, MA (1987)

24. Can bacteria be viable yet non-culturable? Microbiology Department Seminar, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH (1987)

25. Sharks: Denizens of the deep and their diminutive enemies. 2nd Annual Meeting, The Friends of Odiorne Point, Rye, NH (1987)

26. Bacteria as agents of shark disease and shark meat spoilage. U.S.-Japan Joint Seminar on Elasmobranchs as Living Resources, Honolulu, HI (1987)

27. Molecular biological applications in microbial autecology. Genetics Graduate Group Seminar, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH (1988)

28. The microbiology of sharks. Members' Night, Maine Aquarium, Saco, ME (1988)

29. The microbiology of sharks. Department of Animal and Nutritional Sciences Seminar, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH (1988)

30. Survival of pathogenic microorganisms in coastal ocean habitats. Environmental Sciences Program Seminar, University of Massachusetts. Boston Harbor Campus, Boston, MA (1988) 31. Water pollution and human health. Public Lecture, Minnesota Sea Grant, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN (1988)

32. Ocean disposal of wastes. Seminar, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region IX Office, San Francisco, CA (1988)

33. Ocean disposal of wastes. Institute of Marine Sciences Seminar, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA (1988)

34. Survival of pathogenic bacteria in coastal oceans. Environmental Engineering Science Seminar, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA (1989)

35. Survival of pathogenic bacteria in coastal oceans. Environmental Science and Engineering Program, School of Public Health, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA (1989)

36. The survival of pathogenic bacteria in the coastal ocean. Pathogens in the Coastal Ocean Seminar, Sponsored by the Malibu Township Council, Malibu, CA (1989)

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37. Research in marine microbiology. Seminar, Gulf Coast Research Laboratory, Ocean Springs, MS (1989)

38. Viable but nonculturable bacteria: a survival strategy with broad implications. Seminar, Environmental Research Laboratory, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Sabine Island, Gulf Breeze, FL (1990)

39. The coastal oceans - threats and opportunities. International Affairs Week, Star Island Conferences, Star Island, NH (1990)

40. U.S. Biotechnology Research Initiatives. Biotech Week, A Keynote Address to the Annual Meeting of the Minnesota Biotechnology Association, Minneapolis, MN (1992)

41. National Perspective: Potential and the Promise of Biotechnology in the United States. Biotechnology: Growing a New Kentucky Industry, Kentucky Science and Technology Council, Lexington, KY (1992)

42. Issues and opportunities in bioremediation research. Fallen Leaf Lake Conference, Microbial Ecology and Biological Control, South Lake Tahoe, CA (1994)

43. Validation of reliability and predictability of environmental biotechnologies. OECD '94 Workshop on Bioremediation, Tokyo, Japan (1994)

44. Emerging environmental biotechnologies. Lockheed Idaho Technologies Co., Idaho National Engineering Laboratory, Idaho Falls, ID (1995)

45. Bioremediation Initiatives. Conference on Bioremediation of Surface and Subsurface Contamination, Engineering Foundation, Palm Coast, FL (1996)

46. Nonculturable bacteria in marine environments. Seminar, Baruch Institute of Marine Biology and Coastal Research, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC (1996)

47. Environmental issues in the federal government. Symposium: Biotechnology in the Sustainable Environment, The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN (1996)

48. Microbial ecology and biotechnology of bioremediation. Seminar, Microbial Ecology Concepts in Biotechnology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD (1996)

49. Using biotechnology to investigate and mitigate links between climate change and infectious disease. American Academy of Microbiology Roundtable: Global Climate/Global Change and Human Health, Annual Meeting, American Society for Microbiology, New Orleans, LA (1996)

50. The role of oceans in human health, Ocean Studies Board, National Research Council, Washington, D.C. (1998)

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51. Whose feeding frenzy is it anyway? Seminar, Gulf Coast Research Laboratory Summer School Program, Ocean Springs, MS (1998)

52. Shark microbiology. Symposium on Sharks and Shark Fisheries - Keynote address. Mississippi Chapter of the American Fisheries Society, Biloxi, MS (2000)

53. Expanding opportunities for minorities in the ocean and atmospheric sciences. Keynote luncheon address, Third Annual NOAA Conference on Expanding Opportunities for Minorities in the Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences, Jackson, MS (2001)

54. Microbes, sharks, and scholarship. A presentation to Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick, NJ (2001)

55. Biological resource centers for the 21st century. Panelist, Annual Meeting of the Association of Systematics Collections, Chicago, IL (2001)

56. On the road to new molecular tools for detection and source tracking. U.S. EPA Workshop on Development and Application of Ecogenomics for Water Quality Assessment, Kansas City, MO (2002)

57. Implications of bioterrorism legislation. Panelist, NASULGC Board on Oceans and Atmosphere, Chicago, IL (2002)

58. Sharks, Microbes, and Biological Resources. A presentation the College of Science and Technology and the Hattiesburg Clinic Lecture Series in the Sciences, Hattiesburg, MS (2003)

59. Biological Resource Centers - A New Concept to Solve a Global Need. Keynote Address, Fourth Annual Meeting of the International Society for Biological and Environmental Repositories, Philadelphia, PA (2003)

60. The Ocean Commission Report. Keynote Address, Harbors, Navigation and Environment Seminar, American Association of Port Authorities, New Orleans (2004)

61. The Gulf of Mexico and Diseases. Plenary Address, Coastal Zone 05, New Orleans (2005)

62. Katrina Impact: Public Health Issues, Waterborne Diseases. Panelist, USM/Sun Herald Issues & Answers Forum, Gulfport, MS (2006)

63. Johnson, C.N., A.M.B. Phillips, A. Russell, and D.J. Grimes. The Use of Remote Sensing and Molecular Detection to Predict Risk of Infection by Vibrio parahaemolyticus. Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA (2006)

64. Johnson, C.N., A.M.B. Phillips, A. Russell, and D.J. Grimes. Environmental analyses of Vibrio spp. in the Mississippi Sound. Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University, Tallahassee, FL (2007)

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65. Johnson, C.N., A. Russell, V.C. Young, N. Noriea, and D.J. Grimes. Vibrio spp. in the Mississippi Sound: An Introduction to Molecular Microbiology. Mississippi University for Women, Columbus, MS (2007)

66. Johnson, C.N., A. Russell, V.C. Young, N. Noriea, and D.J. Grimes. Vibrio spp. in the Mississippi Sound: An Introduction to Molecular Microbiology. Mississippi School for Math and Science, Columbus, MS (2007)

67. The Ecology and Epidemiology of Vibrios in the Coastal Ocean, Northern California American Society for Microbiology Branch, San Francisco, CA (2006)

68. Challenges of an Institutional Transition and Keys to the Success of the Process. Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi (2007)

69. Sharks, Vibrios and Related Sea Stories. Department of Coastal Sciences Seminar (2007)

70. What About Vibrio? Seminar, School of the Coast and Environment, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA (2008)

71. What About Vibrio? Senior Biology Seminar Series, The University of Southern Mississippi, Gulf Coast Campus (2008)

72. What About Them Vibrios? Seminar, School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA (2009)

73. Remote Sensing Vibrio Website. Presentation, Gulf & South Atlantic States Shellfish Conference 2009, Gulf Hills Hotel, Ocean Springs, MS (2009)

74. Johnson, C.N., Noriea, III, N.F., Griffitt, K.J., Flowers, A., Gundersen, K., and Grimes, D.J., Vibrio parahaemolyticus and other pathogenic vibrios in the Mississippi Sound, NSF Ecology of Infectious Diseases Investigators' Meeting, University of Maryland, College Park, MD (2009)

75. Johnson, C.N., Grimes, D.J., Griffitt, K.J., Noriea, III, N.F., Gundersen, K., Bowers, J., Strom, M., Paranjpye, R., Hasan, N., Huq, A., and R.R. Colwell, COLLABORATIVE RESEARCH: Identifying environmental determinants favorable for the presence and transmission of pathogenic vibrios, Evolution and Ecology of Infectious Diseases Network Meeting, Park City, UT (2009)

76. Forecasting Human Health Risks from Marine Vibrios. Oceans and Human Health Initiative Principal Investigators Meeting, Seattle, WA (2009)

77. Grimes, D.J. and V. Asper. Monitoring biological effects of crude oil in the northern Gulf of Mexico. Special Late-Breaking Session, The Gulf Oil Spill: Microbes to the Rescue? American Society for Microbiology General Meeting, San Diego, CA. (2010)

78. The Deepwater Horizon Blowout – Implications for Oceans and Human Health. Gordon Research Conference on Oceans and Human Health, 2010, University of New England,

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Biddeford, ME. (2010)

79. Grimes, D.J. et al., T.C. Hazen et al. and S. McLellan et al. Marine bioremediation: The microbial response to the Deepwater Horizon incident. 9th International Marine Biotechnology Conference, Qingdao, PR China (2010)

80. Grimes, D.J. et al., T.C. Hazen et al. and S. McLellan et al. Microbial responses to the Deepwater Horizon incident. South Central Branch Meeting, American Society for Microbiology, Hattiesburg, MS. (2010)

81. Role of remote sensing for the surveillance of Vibrios in the environment. Vibrios in the Environment 2010, Biloxi, MS. (2010)

82. Grimes, D.J. et al., T.C. Hazen et al. and S. McLellan et al. Vibrios and petroleum in the Gulf of Mexico. Vibrios in the Environment 2010, Biloxi, MS. (2010)

83. D. Jay Grimes, Mark Strom and Juli Trtanj. Forecasting human health risks from bacteria in the Ocean. 91st Annual Meeting, American Meteorological Society, Seattle, WA (2011)

84. Grimes, D.J. et al., T.C. Hazen et al. and S. McLellan et al. Microbial responses to the Deepwater Horizon incident. Keynote address: Department of Biological Sciences 27th Annual Graduate Student Forum Symposium, Hattiesburg, MS. (2011)

85. Grimes, D.J. et al., T.C. Hazen et al., S. McLellan et al. and M. Sogin et al. Vibrios and petroleum biodegradation – capable but contributory? Society for Industrial Microbiology 61st Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA. (2011)

86. Oceans and Human Health. Keynote address at “Exploring Resilience in a Changing World,” a workshop sponsored by the Rand Corp. and MS AL Sea Grant Consortium, Biloxi, MS. (2011)

87. Grimes, D.J. Can you really see bacteria from space? 92st Annual Meeting, American Meteorological Society, New Orleans, LA. (2012)

88. Grimes, D.J., S. Allen, H. Nguyen, A.R. Flowers, K.J. Griffitt, M.L. Pendleton, S. Shou and D.J. Grimes. Hydrocarbon utilization by the Vibrios. South Central Branch Meeting, American Society for Microbiology, MSU, Starkville, MS. (2012)

89. Opening remarks and an application of remote sensing to predict human health risks from the ocean. In ‘Oceans and Human Health: The Microbiological Perspective,’ Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Special Interest Symposium 037, Denver, CO. (2013)

90. Grimes, D.J. and Shuo Shen. Microbial disease in marine aquaculture. Keynote Address, International Marine Microbiology Conference, Qingdao, China (2015)

91. Grimes, D.J. Vibrio Ecology and Disease Etiology. ASMDL talk at a joint meeting of Missouri and MO Valley branch ASM meetings, Springfield, MO (2017)

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Technical Reports:1. Grimes, D.J. 1977. Microbiological Water Quality Effects of Hydraulically Dredging Polluted

Bottom Sediments in the Upper Mississippi River. I. Resuspension of Bacteria. Submitted to: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, St. Paul, MN. 31 pp.

2. Grimes, D.J. 1978. Microbiological Water Quality Effects of Clamshell Dredging Bottom Sediments from the Upper Mississippi River. Submitted to: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, St. Paul, MN. 34 pp.

3. Grimes, D.J. 1979. Efficacy of Effluent Containment as a Means of Minimizing Adverse Microbiological Water Quality Effects of Hydraulic Dredging. Submitted to: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, St. Paul, MN. 24 pp.

4. Grimes, D.J. 1986. Assessment of Ocean Waste Disposal. Task 5. Human Health Impacts of Waste Constituents. II. Pathogens and Antibiotic- and Heavy-Metal Resistant Bacteria. Submitted to: Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment, Washington, D.C. 132 pp.

5. Grimes, D.J. and G.R. Heufelder. 1990. The Buzzards Bay Project. Synthesis Report on Pathogen Issues. Submitted to: The Buzzards Bay Project, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and Massachusetts Executive Office of Environmental Affairs, Boston, MA. 91 pp.

6. Biotechnology Research Subcommittee. 1992. Biotechnology for the 21st Century. Committee on Life Sciences and Health, Federal Coordinating Council for Science, Engineering, and Technology, Washington, D.C. (worked on budget tables, narrative, and illustrations)

7. Biotechnology Research Subcommittee. 1993. Biotechnology for the 21st Century: Realizing the Promise. Committee on Life Sciences and Health, Federal Coordinating Council for Science, Engineering, and Technology, Washington, D.C. (worked on budget tables, narrative, and illustrations)

8. Biotechnology Research Subcommittee. 1995. Biotechnology for the 21st Century: New Horizons. Committee on Fundamental Science, National Science and Technology Council, Washington, D.C. (wrote most of the marine biotechnology chapter, participated in preparation of the environmental biotechnology chapter, assisted in overall editing)

9. National Research Council. 1999. From Monsoons to Microbes: Understanding the Ocean’s Role in Human Health. National Academy Press, Washington, D.C. (prepared much of Chapt. 2)

10. National Research Council. 2000. Bridging Boundaries Through Regional Marine Research. National Academy Press, Washington, D.C.

11. Grimes, D.J., D.M. Rebarchik, R.F. Bond, and W.D. Burke. 2000. Experiences with Enterococci in Mississippi Coastal Waters. A Report Submitted to the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality. Institute of Marine Sciences, Ocean Springs, MS.

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12. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. 2001. Biological Resource Centres: Underpinning the Future of Life Sciences and Biotechnology. OECD, Paris, France.

13. Rose, J.B. and D.J. Grimes. 2001. Reevaluation of Microbial Water Quality: Powerful New Tools for Detection and Risk Assessment. A Report from American Academy of Microbiology, Washington, D.C.

14. National Research Council. 2001. Under the Weather: Climate, Ecosystems, and Infectious Disease. National Academy Press, Washington, D.C.

15. National Research Council. 2002. Marine Biotechnology in the 21st Century: Problems, Promises, and Products. National Academy Press, Washington, D.C.

16. Grimes, D.J. and A. Wright. 2005. Connecting the Gulf of Mexico and Human Health. Final Report on a Workshop Sponsored by The University of Southern Mississippi and the Mississippi Alabama Sea Grant Consortium, Long Beach, MS.

17. Grimes, D.J. 2013. Comparing the efficacy of ozonation and chlorination to control bacteria and plankton in saline and brackish water. Submitted to F.L. Singleton, Principal Research Scientist, Dow Microbial Control, The Dow Chemical Company, Buffalo Grove, IL.

Invited Panel, Symposium, Workshop and Briefing Participation:Co-convener, Public Health Microbiology Session, Third International Symposium on Microbial

Ecology, August, 1983, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI.

Co-convener, Microbial Ecology Session, 84th Annual Meeting, American Society for Microbiology, March, 1984, St. Louis, MO.

Reviewer, Public Health Panel, U.S. AID, May, 1986, Washington, D.C.

Co-convener, Seminar on Dormancy in Aquatic and Terrestrial Bacteria: Normal, Injured, Starved, Non-culturable, or All of These? 87th Annual Meeting, American Society for Microbiology, March, 1987, Atlanta, GA.

Convener, Buzzards Bay Project Symposium, Pathogens Section, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, February, 1989, Woods Hole, MA.

Participant, Shellfish Sanitation Forum, Western Regional Aquaculture Consortium, June, 1989, San Francisco, CA.

Panel Member, Relationships Between Pathogen Input and Shellfish in Narragansett Bay, The Narragansett Bay Project, June, 1989, Narragansett, RI.

Site Visit Panel Member, U.S. EPA, ORD Biotechnology Risk Assessment Program, All

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Investigators Meeting and Peer Review, November, 1989, Corvallis, OR.

Moderator, Public Health Hazards Work Session, Gulf of Maine Conference, December, 1989, Portland, ME.

Participant, Earth Day Malibu 1990, April, 1990, Malibu, CA.

Site Visit Panel Member, U.S. DOE, Pacific Northwest Laboratory/Environmental Science Research Center, August, 1990, Richland, WA.

Review Panel Member, Florida Sea Grant College Program, August, 1990, Gainesville, FL.

Participant, Working Group Review Meeting, U.S. DOE Deep Subsurface Microbiology Program, August, 1990, Gaithersburg, MD.

Science Working Group, 1991-1996 National Ocean Pollution Program Plan, National Ocean Pollution Program Office, NOAA, January, 1991, SUNY/Stony Brook, NY.

Participant, Workshop on Molecular Approaches to Ecosystems Research, U.S. DOE, January, 1991, Asilomar Conference Center, Asilomar, CA.

Participant, Workshop on Bioremediation, U.S. EPA, May, 1991, Washington, D.C.

Participant, Colloquium on Strategies and Mechanisms for Field Release in Environmental Bioremediation, American Academy of Microbiology, January, 1993, San Antonio, TX.

Convener, Microbiological Water Quality and Public Perception Round Table, American Society for Microbiology Conference on Water Quality in the Western Hemisphere, April, 1993, San Juan, PR.

Workgroup Member, Bioremediation Risk Assessment Workshop, Workgroup on Fate Protocols and Issues for GEMs and Metabolites, U.S. EPA, June, 1993, Duluth, MN.

Panel Member, National Indicator Study Peer Review Workshop and Panel, NOAA/NMFS, September, 1993, Baltimore, MD.

Convener, Agricultural and Environmental Research Panel, Biotechnology and Biomolecular Sciences Colloquium, Pacific Northwest Laboratory, March, 1994, Richland, WA.

Chair, Session VI. Bioremediation, Fallen Leaf Lake Conference, Microbial Ecology and Biological Control, September, 1994, South Lake Tahoe, CA.

Participant, Roundtable on Future Challenges and Opportunities for Microbial Collections, Commission on Life Sciences, National Research Council, March, 1995, Washington, D.C.

Co-chair, OECD Workshop Amsterdam '95 on Wider Application and Diffusion of

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Bioremediation Technologies, November, 1995, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Participant, Colloquium on The Microbial World: Foundation of the Biosphere, American Academy of Microbiology, January, 1996, Palm Coast, FL.

Participant, American Academy of Microbiology Roundtable: Global Climate/Global Change and Human Health, Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, May, 1996, New Orleans, LA.

Co-chair, Environmental Biotech '96, NSTC-BIO Conference, June, 1996, Philadelphia, PA.

Chair, Large-Scale Microbial Genome Sequencing Efforts, 35th Hanford Symposium on Health and the Environment: Microbial Genome Research and its Applications, October, 1996, Richland, WA.

Panel Member, Biotechnology Investigation - Ocean Margins Program Panel Review, U.S. DOE, June, 1997, Washington, D.C.

Panel Member, Washington Sea Grant Program Research Review, September, 1997, Seattle, WA.

Panel Member, Microbiology, Physiology, and Neuroscience Panel, NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program, February, 1998, Washington, D.C.

Panel Member, Microbial Genome Research Review, U.S. DOE, March, 1998, Rockville, MD.

Speaker and Member, Committee on the Ocean’s Role in Human Health, Ocean Studies Board, National Research Council, National Academy of Sciences, 1998, Washington, D.C.

Co-organizer and co-convener (with Dr. R.R. Colwell), Human Health Risks in the Ocean, AAAS Annual Meeting and Science Innovation Exposition, 1999, Anaheim, CA.

Speaker and Member of the U.S. Delegation, OECD Workshop Tokyo ‘99 on Scientific and Technological Infrastructure (Support for Biological Resource Centers), 1999, Tokyo, Japan.

Member, Committee on the Assessment of Regional Marine Research Programs, Ocean Studies Board, National Research Council, National Academy of Sciences, 1999, Washington, D.C.

Member, Microbial Genome Sequencing: Current Status and Future Needs, American Academy of Microbiology Colloquium, 1999, New Orleans, LA.

Speaker and Member, Committee on Climate, Ecosystems, Infectious Diseases, and Human Health, Board on Atmospheric Sciences and Climate, National Research Council, National Academy of Sciences, 1999-2000, Washington, D.C.

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Vice Chair and Head of the U.S. Delegation, Task Force on Biological Resource Centers, Working Party on Biotechnology, OECD, 1999-2000, Paris, FR.

Co-chair, Re-evaluation of Microbial Water Quality: Powerful New Tools for Detection and Risk Assessment, American Academy of Microbiology Colloquium, 2000, Amelia Island, FL.

Co-chair, Coliforms to Fluorochromes: A Century of Water Quality Assessment, Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, AAM Special Interest Session 94, 2000, Los Angeles, CA.

Co-chair, National Marine Pathogens Plan Workshop, NOAA, 2000, Biloxi, MS.

Speaker and Participant, Workshop on Development and Application of Ecogenomics for Water Quality Assessment, U.S. EPA, 2002, Kansas City, MO.

Panel Member, Recommendations for Sequencing Targets Review, U.S. DOE, 2002, Washington, D.C.

Co-chair, Biotechnology Session, Oceans 2002, Marine Technology Society/Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Biloxi, MS.

Panel Member, Recommendations for Sequencing Targets Review, U.S. DOE, 2003, Washington, D.C.

Panel Member, Program Assessment Team, University of Southern California Sea Grant Program, 2003, Los Angeles, CA.

Site Visit Review Team Member, Univ. of Hawaii Application to the NSF for a Science and Technology Center - the Center for Microbial Oceanography Research and Education, 2004, Honolulu, HI.

Co-organizer and Co-chair (with Dr. Amy Wright), Connecting the Gulf of Mexico and Human Health, A Workshop Sponsored by The University of Southern Mississippi and the Mississippi Alabama Sea Grant Consortium, 2005, Long Beach, MS.

Panel Chair and Speaker, Public Health Panel, State of the Gulf of Mexico Summit 2006, Corpus Christi, TX.

Invited Facilitator, Education and Training Break-out session, Joint Annual Meeting of the NSF/NIEHS and NOAA Centers of Excellence in Oceans and Human Health, 2008, Honolulu, HI.

Discussion Leader, The Physical-Biological Link: Modeling and Forecasting. Gordon Research Conference in Oceans and Human Health, 2008, Tilton School, Tilton, NH.

Speaker, NOAA’s Oceans and Human Health Initiative, a presentation to the Ocean Health

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Working Group, Science Advisory Panel to NOAA, March 2009, Washington D.C.

Speaker, Ocean Health Working Terms of Reference Questions, a presentation to the Ocean Health Working Group, Science Advisory Panel to NOAA, June 2009, Washington D.C.

Speaker, U.S. House of Representatives Briefing on the Oceans and Human Health Initiative, “Seafood Safety, Public Health Forecasting, Partnerships and Outside Advice.” March 2010, Washington D.C.

Speaker, U.S. Senate Briefing on the Oceans and Human Health Initiative, “Seafood Safety, Public Health Forecasting, Partnerships and Outside Advice.” March 2010, Washington D.C.

Invited Facilitator, Ecosystem and Socio-economic Effects Breakout Working Group Session, Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill Scientific Symposium, sponsored by the Consortium for Ocean Leadership, May 2010, Baton Rouge, LA.

Discussion Leader, One Health. Gordon Research Conference on Oceans and Human Health, 2010, University of New England, Biddeford, ME.

Convener, Session on Ocean and Coastal Bioresources: Human and Earth Interactions, 9th

International Marine Biotechnology Conference, October 2010, Qingdao, PR China.

Chair, Session I: Applied and Environmental Microbiology. South Central Branch Meeting, American Society for Microbiology, October 2010, Hattiesburg, MS.

Invited Breakaway Strand Facilitator, Human Communities: Disaster Management, Sustainability and Health, Collaborative Scientific Research Opportunities Relative to the Gulf Oil Spill, sponsored by Louisiana EPSCoR and the Louisiana Board of Regents, November 2010, New Orleans, LA.

Co-chair (with Dr. Ron Atlas), Session 7. Biodegradation of Crude Oil, Vibrios in the Environment 2010, November 2010, Biloxi, MS.

Symposium Speaker, Oceans and Human Health: Health Impacts of the Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill, 11th National Conference on Science, Policy and the Environment – Our Changing Oceans, National Council for Science and the Environment, January 2011, Washington, DC.

Participant, NOAA Marine Microbes Workshop, November 2011, Hollings Marine Laboratory, Charleston, SC.

Plenary Speaker and Panelist, Chesapeake Bay Health Workshop, February 2012, UM College Park, MD.

Plenary Speaker (2 talks) and Panelist, Puget Sound Health Workshop, March 2012, Seattle, WA.

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Chair, ‘Oceans and Human Health: The Microbiological Perspective,’ Annual Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Special Interest Symposium 037, 2013, Denver, CO.

Poster Presentation, Representing the ASM Public and Scientific Affairs Board Committee on Environmental Microbiology, to the 19th Annual National Science Funding Exhibition and Reception, Rayburn House Building, 2013, Washington, DC.

Panel member, Marine Biodiversity Observation Networks, Joint NASA-NOAA panel, 2014, Washington, DC.

Moderator, Oceans and Human Health Session, Capitol Hill Oceans Week (CHOW), National Marine Sanctuary Foundation, June 2014, Washington DC.

Co-chair with Okechukwu Ekenna, M.D., MPH, D (ABMM), FACP, Singing River Health System and University of South Alabama, Microbes: Coastal Concerns for Clinicians, August 2014, GCRL Cedar Point, Ocean Springs, MS.

Panel member, 2014 Review of the U.S. Department of Energy’s Joint Genome Institute (JGI). December 2014, ORAU/ORISE Office, Arlington, VA.

Professional Training:Covey Leadership Training, The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People, March, 1995.Leadership Jackson County, 1999-2000Media Training, ASM Communications Committee, 1999Media Training, The GodwinGroup, 2003

Interviews:Interviewed by the BBC (twice), CNN (twice), Los Angeles Times (twice), London Times (once), Washington Post, Baltimore Sun, Minneapolis Star, La Crosse Tribune, Sun Herald (numerous times), Hattiesburg American (numerous times), Boston Globe, New York Times (twice); Clarion Ledger, Miami Herald, Mississippi Press, ASM News, Science, The Scientist, Nature Biotechnology, The New Scientist (numerous times), Scientific American (twice), Associated Press, ASM Press Conference, and numerous local radio and TV stations and newspapers regarding research on water pollution, especially public health implications of the presence and long-term survival of fecal indicator bacteria and human pathogens in aquatic environments, research on petroleum pollution and biodegradation (especially the Deepwater Horizon incident), and administration of The University of Southern Mississippi.

Professional Recognition:Outstanding Service Plaque, ASM, for chairing the Communications Committee 9 yrs, 2006Hammer Award, National Performance Review, Vice President of the United States, 1998Appreciation Plaque, NOAA National Seafood Safety Laboratory, 1998Award for Superior Job Performance, U.S. DOE, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996Certificate of Appreciation, Environmental Management Science Program, U.S. DOE, 1996 Proclamation, City of Malibu, CA, for service regarding coastal ocean issues, 1996Appreciation Plaque, Biotechnology Industry Organization, 1996

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Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science, 1996Appreciation Plaque, U.S. DOE, 1996Certificate of Appreciation, METCOM Work Study Program, U.S. DOE, 1995Certificate of Appreciation, National Science Bowl, U.S. DOE, 1991Fellow, American Academy of Microbiology, 1990Beta Beta Beta, Honorary Biological Society, 1966

Personal Grants and Contracts:Traineeship: Federal Water Pollution Control Administration, Dept. of the Interior, through

Colorado State Univ., Dept. of Microbiology, Fort Collins, CO. 1968 to 1970.

Fellowship: Research Fellowship, Federal Water Quality Administration, Dept. of the Interior (Formerly the FWPCA, now the Water Quality Office of the EPA). 1970 to 1971.

Grants & National Science Foundation, Instructional Scientific EquipmentContracts: Program Grant, co-author, $29,800.

U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, 1974, Revegetation of dredge material, co-investigator, $50,100.

U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, 1975, Simulation model study of Navigation Pool 8 to predict biological changes incurred by altered physical-chemical changes due to management practices, co-investigator, $117,000.

U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, 1976, Microbiological water quality effects of hydraulically dredging polluted bottom sediments in the Upper Mississippi River, principal investigator, $7,500.

U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, 1977, Microbiological water quality effects of clamshell dredging bottom sediments from the Upper Mississippi River, principal investigator, $4,500.

U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, 1978, Microbiological water quality effects of hydraulic dredging with dredged material containment, principal investigator, $4,100.

Colorado State University, 1979, Chippewa River Project, co-investigator, $7,000.

UW-La Crosse Institutional Studies Grant, 1979, Degradative plasmids as a basis for atypical biochemical reactions in aquatic isolates of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, principal investigator, $3,200.

UW-La Crosse and Western Wisconsin Medical Foundation, 1979, Rapid preliminary diagnosis of anaerobic infections using direct gas-liquid chromatography of clinical specimens, principal investigator, $4,000.

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Dept. of Environmental Services, Bureau of Air and Water Quality, Washington, D.C., 1982, Potomac River Survey, co-principal investigator, $28,120.

Office of Naval Research, 1981-85, Alterations in the pathogenic properties of human pathogens from the marine environment, Grant No. N00014-81-K-0638, co- principal investigator, $439,880.

National Science Foundation, 1984-86, Molecular-genetic and ecological studies of hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria in estuarine and coastal waters of Mexico, Grant No. INT-82-15418, co-principal investigator, $23,000.

Maryland Sea Grant College Program, 1984, Nonrecoverability of fecal coliforms and effect on coliform indices for public health safety, Grant No. RIP-15, co-principal investigator, $26,600.

National Science Foundation, 1985-88, Systematics of the genus Vibrio and related organisms, Grant No. BSR-84-01397, co-principal investigator and negotiator, $195,000.

Agency for International Development, 1983-86, Environmental Microbiology Studies in Bangladesh, Grant No. DPE-5542-G-SS-4060, co-principal investigator, $140,000.

Office of Technology Assessment, Congress of the United States, 1985, Assessment of Ocean Waste Disposal: Human Health Impacts of Waste Constituents. II. Pathogens and Antibiotic and Heavy Metal-Resistant Bacteria, Contract 85/3-12, principal investigator, $8,000.

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1985-88, Survival, modification and effects of genetically engineered microorganisms released to the aquatic environment, co- principal investigator, $272,971.

World Health Organization, 1985-1986, Detection of Vibrio cholerae in the aquatic environment, Grant No. C6/181/1 USA, co-principal investigator, $15,000.

National Institutes of Health, 1985-86, Ecology of Vibrio cholerae and related vibrios, Grant No. R22-AI-14242-0741, co-principal investigator, $83,245.

National Science Foundation, 1983-86, Ecology and molecular biology of Vibrionaceae in the sea, Grant No. INT-82-12853, co-principal investigator, $33,638.

Office of Naval Research, 1986-1989, Ecology and molecular genetic studies of marine bacteria, Contract No. N00014-86-K-0197, co-principal investigator, $307,051.

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U.S. Department of the Interior, Geological Survey, 1985, Microbiology of deep coastal plain sediments, Contract No. O.M. 173484, principal investigator, $4,950

U.S. Department of the Interior, Geological Survey, 1985-1986, Microbiological analysis of core samples for the presence of heavy-metal tolerance bacteria, Contract No. O.M. 173487, co-principal investigator, $4,950.

Water Resources Research Center, University of Maryland, 1986, Fate of viable but non-culturable pathogenic bacteria in the Chesapeake Bay, Grant No. 03-86, principal investigator, $18,000.

U.S. Department of the Interior, Geological Survey, 1986, Analysis of soil cores for vertical profile of arsenic-resistant bacteria, Grant No. PO163067, co-principal investigator, $4,950.

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Underwater Research Program, 1986-1989, Microbiological hazards associated with diving in polluted waters: an epidemiological study, Grant No. NA86AA-D-SG006, co-principal investigator, $519,639.

University of Maryland, 1986, Microbiological evaluation of health hazards associated with air conditioners on the University of Maryland, College Park, Campus, co-principal investigator, $55,100.

University of New Hampshire, 1988, UNH Marine Docent Training and Outreach Programs, Undesignated Gifts, $4,593.

University System of New Hampshire, 1988, Freshman Marine Retreat and Marine Fair - Exploring Careers in Marine Science and Ocean Engineering, USNH Innovation and Opportunity Grant, principal investigator, $14,840.

National Institutes of Health, 1989-1991, Survival of pathogenic bacteria in oysters. Grant No. BM-2 l Rl5 AI28698-01, principal investigator, $109,382, (award transferred to Dr. S.H. Jones when I joined U.S. Dept. of Energy).

Office of State Planning (NH), 1989-1990, Great Bay Water Pollution Assessment, Contract, principal investigator, $91,000.

Buzzards Bay Project (U.S. EPA and Massachusetts EOEA), 1988-89, Synthesis report on pathogens in Buzzards Bay, principal investigator, $5,000.

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, 1989-1990, A prototype for integrated coastal ocean research and management, NA89AA-D-SG020 (UNH Sea Grant Project No. M/D-2), principal investigator, $100,000 (award transferred to Dr. Chris Neefus when I joined U.S. Dept. of Energy).

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, 1990, A coastal ocean

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initiative in the marine sciences and ocean engineering, initial negotiator and co-author, $2,000,000.

MS Tidelands Trust Fund through the MS Department of Marine Resources, 1998, Cedar Point Development, principal investigator, $290,000.

U.S. Department of the Navy, NAVOCEANO, 1999, Management of Research Vessel IX-508, principal investigator, $160,000.

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, 1999, Construction and construction-related activities associated with the U.S. Marine Shrimp Farming Program, Grant No. NA96AB0217, principal investigator, $2,349,213.

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, 1999, A proposal to administer the CSC Coastal Management Fellowship Program, Grant No. NA870C0490, principal investigator, $369,970.

MS Tidelands Trust Fund through the MS Department of Marine Resources, 1999, R/V Tommy Munro Upgrade, Award FY2000-M103, principal investigator, $322,295.

National Science Foundation/EPSCoR, 2000, A regional framework for interconnectivity of coastal ocean observing systems, Grant No. , co-principle investigator, $18,312 (subcontract of an $850,000 award).

U.S. Department of the Navy, NAVOCEANO, 2000, Management of Research Vessel IX-508, principal investigator, $245,560.

MS Department of Marine Resources, 2000, Cedar Point Dock and Pier Construction, principal investigator, $138,150.

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, 2000, A proposal to administer the CSC Coastal Management Fellowship Program, principal investigator, $163,082.

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, 2001, A proposal to administer the CSC Coastal Management Fellowship Program, principal investigator, $162,603.

U.S. Department of the Navy, NAVOCEANO, 2001, Management of Research Vessel IX-508, principal investigator, $200,000.

MS Tidelands Trust Fund through the MS Department of Marine Resources, 2001, Cedar Point Nature and Wildlife Preserve, principal investigator, $200,000.

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, 2002, A proposal to administer the CSC Coastal Management Fellowship Program, principal

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investigator, $241,648.

U.S. Department of the Navy, NAVOCEANO, 2002, Management of Research Vessel IX-508, co-principal investigator, $252,000.

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 2002, Bacterial source tracking initiative for the Gulf of Mexico, Assistance no. MX-97470303, co-principal investigator, $75,000.

Harrison County, MS, 2002-2004, Are humans the main source of high fecal coliform counts along Harrison County beaches? An investigation using the Pratt Ave. watershed as a model, co-investigator, $60,000.

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Office of Global Programs, Oceans and Human Health Program, 9/1/04-8/31/08, The use of remote sensing and molecular detection to predict the risk of infection by Vibrio parahaemolyticus, Grant No. NA04-OAR-4600214, principal investigator, $698,952.

U.S. Department of Commerce/National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration/ National Aeronautic and Space Administration/MRC, 2006-2010, NASA Consortium NOAA Methylmercury, NASA Contract #NNS06AA98B Delivery Order #NNS06AB11T, co-principal investigator with William Hawkins, $1,200,000.

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Office of Global Programs, Oceans and Human Health Program, 2006, The use of remote sensing and molecular detection to predict the risk of infection by Vibrio parahaemolyticus, Supplement to Grant No. NA04-OAR-4600214, principal investigator, $93,095.

U.S. Department of Commerce/National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration/ National Aeronautic and Space Administration/MRC, 2008, NASA Consortium NOAA Methylmercury, NASA Contract #NNS06AA98B Delivery Order #NNS06AB11T, co-principal investigator with William Hawkins, $172,279 supplement to this existing award.

National Science Foundation, Ecology of Infectious Diseases Program, 9/1/08-8/31/12 with a no-cost extension to 8/31/13, Collaborative Research: Identifying Environmental Determinants Favorable for the Presence and Transmission of Pathogenic Vibrios, Award No. EF-0813285, co-principal investigator with Dr. Crystal N. Johnson who is the PI, $2,325,000. (Collaborative institutions are the University of Maryland, College Park, MD, Dr. Anwar Huq, Co-PI and the NOAA/NMFS Northwest Fisheries Science Center, Seattle, WA, Dr. Mark Strom, Co-PI. When Johnson went to Louisiana State in 2009, Grimes was given part of the total award - $498,6626 - under a new award number – EF-1003943.)

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Contract with NOAA/NOS through the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR), Creation of a Website Based on Remote Sensing to Nowcast the Abundance and Distribution of Vibrios in the Coastal Ocean, Grant No. NA-06-OAR4310119, UCAR Sub Award No. S09-75034, principal investigator; co-PIs are Crystal N. Johnson and Greg Carter, 1-year award, $43,552.

National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Earth Science for Decision Making – Gulf of Mexico Region, 9/15/09-9/14/2011; Remote Sensing to Assess Microbial Water Quality at Beaches and Shellfish Beds, Award No. NNX09AR57G, DJG principal investigator; co-PIs are Crystal N. Johnson, Greg Carter, Carlos Del Castillo (Johns Hopkins, APL), and Callie M. Hall (NASA/SSC); 2-year award for $400,000 ($149,264 for USM, $163,425 for JHU, and $87,311 for NASA/SSC).

Mississippi Department of Marine Resources, 8/15-12/31/09; Relationships Between Fecal Coliforms and Pathogenic Vibrios in Mississippi Shellfish Growing Waters, Sub-Grant S-09-USM-EDRPII-Vibrio-05; principal investigator, 4.5-month, $11,425.

U.S. Department of Agriculture, National Institute of Food and Agriculture, 8/1/09-7/31/10; U.S. Marine Shrimp Farming Program, USM Project Grant No. GR03704, USDA award no. 2010-38808-21118; PI is Jeff Lotz and coPIs are D. Jay Grimes and Kevin Dillon; 1-year sub-award to DJG for $85,745.

National Science Foundation, 9/1/09-8/31/12; HBCU-RISE Center for Microbial Ecology, Molecular Biology and Biotechnology, and Water Quality, NSF Award No. 0932137, USM Project Grant No. GR03936; PI is Henry Williams, Florida A&M University, and D. Jay Grimes, co-PI, assisted the PI in training his graduate students in Vibrio parahaemolyticus isolation and identification techniques; sub-award to DJG was $24,940.

J. Craig Venter Institute, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases sponsored Pathogen Functional Genomics Resource Center, July, 2010; Inter-strain variation in potentially pathogenic Vibrio parahaemolyticus in the northern Gulf of Mexico, DNA microarrays prepared by the JCVI PFGRC, principal investigator, no stated value.

Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative, money administered and awarded by the Northern Gulf Institute, Mississippi State University, 7/1/10-12/31/10; Microbial Response to MC252 Oil and Dispersant, Task 7 in Master Agreement No. 191001 306811 04, D.J. Grimes and K. Dillon are coPIs; Grimes portion is $40,095.

U.S. Department of Agriculture, National Institute of Food and Agriculture, 8/1/10-7/31/11; U.S. Marine Shrimp Farming Program, USM Project Grant No. GR03704; USDA award 2010-38808-21118; PI is Jeff Lotz and co-PIs are D. Jay Grimes and Kevin Dillon; 1-year sub-award to DJG for $85,745.

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U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, transferred to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in 2012, 9/1/10-12/31/14 with a no-cost extension to 12/31/15; MS.R.798 - A Bottlenose Dolphin Surveillance Team for the Mississippi Sound, BOEMR award no. M10AF20151; D.J. Grimes, PI; co-PIs are K. Dillon and R.M. Overstreet; total award is $993,816 (Grimes portion is $450,152).

Stratus Consulting, Contractor for the Louisiana Oil Spill Coordinator’s Office (LOSCO), National Resource Damage Assessment, D.J. Grimes, PI; Phase 1, 9/1/11-9/1/12, Services Agreement S161-2S-1814, $161,981; Phase 2, 6/1/12- , $187,558; Phase 3, 10/15/12-1/14/14, $294,480; .

INBRE (IDeA Network of Biomedical Research Excellence, a NIH award to a consortium of MS universities and colleges with USM as the lead institution), a $1,000 award to DJG for INBRE summer intern Samantha L. Allen to purchase supplies.

NSF-EPSCoR (MS EPSCoR award to Dr. Sandra Harpole at Mississippi State University), a $1,000 sub-award to DJG for EPSCoR summer intern Hang Nguyen to purchase supplies.

NSF-EPSCoR (MS EPSCoR, award to Dr. Sandra Harpole at Mississippi State University), a $1,000 sub-award to DJG for EPSCoR summer intern Robert Buntyn to purchase supplies.

NSF-EAGER, 5/15/14-5/14/16; Initial characterization of the elasmobranch microbiome and potential roles in host physiology, Dr. Andy Evans, PI; coPIs are DJG, Drs. Karen Nelson and Janet McDonald, JCVI, and Natalie Mylniczenko, Walt Disney Corp., $289,885, DJG share is $106,561.

Stratus Consulting, Contractor for the Louisiana Oil Spill Coordinator’s Office (LOSCO), National Resource Damage Assessment, DJG, PI; Dr. Joe Griffitt, coPI. Phase 1, 9/1/11-9/1/12, $161,981; Phase 2, 6/1/12- , $187,558; Phase 3, 10/15/12-1/14/14, $294,480; Services Agreement S203-4S-2115, continuation of Task Orders 002 and 003, Fish Health Sampling, 1/14-1/15 , $143,790.14.

INBRE (IDeA Network of Biomedical Research Excellence, a NIH award to a consortium of MS universities and colleges with USM as the lead institution), a $750 award to DJG for INBRE summer intern Adam Schneider to purchase supplies.

INBRE, an award to Maryann LaRue, R.N. to work in the Grimes lab from May 25 to July 31, 2015. She isolated and identified bacteria from healthy fish collected from the GCRL’s Thad Cochran Center for Marine Aquaculture.

Mississippi Department of Marine Resources, Shellfish Sanitation Laboratory, DJG PI, Rebecca Hardgrove, lead technician and coPI. FY16 award is $156,025.

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Proposals in Review (none at present)

Grants, Contracts and Donations Obtained for Others:

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Oceans and Human Health Initiative; International conference: “Vibrios in the Environment 2010,” 11/7-12/10; $20,000

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation; International conference: “Vibrios in the Environment 2010,” 11/7-12/10; $30,459

British Petroleum; International conference: “Vibrios in the Environment 2010,” 11/7-12/10; $30,000

Chevron; International conference: “Vibrios in the Environment 2010,” 11/7-12/10; $15,000

Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation; International conference: “Vibrios in the Environment 2010,” 11/7-12/10; $5,000

National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Applied Sciences Program; International conference: “Vibrios in the Environment 2010,” 11/7-12/10; $5,000

Mississippi Department of Marine Resources; International conference: “Vibrios in the Environment 2010,” 11/7-12/10; In-kind – seafood and cooks for banquet

Northern Gulf Institute; International conference: “Vibrios in the Environment 2010,” 11/7-12/10; $5,000

Southern Universities Research Consortium; International conference: “Vibrios in the Environment 2010,” 11/7-12/10; $2,500

Mississippi-Alabama Sea Grant Consortium; International conference: “Vibrios in the Environment 2010,” 11/7-12/10; $5,000

Roche; International conference: “Vibrios in the Environment 2010,” 11/7-12/10; $2,000

National Science Foundation, GEO Oceans and Human Health Program; Gordon Research Conference on Oceans and Human Health, 6/3-8/2012, and Gordon Research Seminar on Oceans and Human Health, 6/2-3/2012; $15,000

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Oceans and Human Health Initiative; Gordon Research Conference on Oceans and Human Health, 6/3-

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8/2012, and Gordon Research Seminar on Oceans and Human Health, 6/2-3/2012; $1,000

Mississippi Department of Marine Resources; Gordon Research Seminar on Oceans and Human Health, 6/2-3/2012; $3,000

Springer; Gordon Research Conference on Oceans and Human Health, 6/3-8/2012, and Gordon Research Seminar on Oceans and Human Health, 6/2-3/2012; $500

National Institute for Environmental Health Sciences, Gordon Research Seminar on Oceans and Human Health, 6/2-3/2012; $8,100

Courses Taught (excluding thesis and dissertation direction):Biol. 231 – General Bacteriology (UW-La Crosse; ea. semester, 10 years)Biol. 411/611 – Advanced Bacteriol. (UW-La Crosse; alt. semesters, 10 years)Biol. 712 – Aquatic Microbiology (UW-La Crosse; alt. semesters, 10 years)Biol. 721 – Microbial Genetics (UW-La Crosse; alt. semesters, 2 years)Biol. 721 – Directed Studies in Virology (UW-La Crosse, twice)Micb. 400 – Systematic Microbiology (U. of Maryland, 3 times)Micb. 420 – Epidemiology and Public Health (U. of Maryland, once)Micb. 688I – Current Topics in Marine Microbiol. (U. of Maryland, twice)Micr. 714/814 – Water Pollution Microbiology (UNH, once)COA 492 – Special Problems in Shark Microbiology (USM, once)BSC 380 – General Microbiology (USM, 4 times)BSC 380L – General Microbiology Laboratory (USM, 4 times)COA 471/571 – Marine Microbiology (BSC 490/590-MAR 409/509 cross list; USM, 5 times)COA 471L/571L – Marine Microbiology Laboratory (USM, twice)COA 690/790 – Oceans and Human Health (USM, once, team taught via IVN with Dr. Tim McLean at USM in Hattiesburg and Dr. Mark Hamann at The University of Mississippi in Oxford, MS)COA 692/792 – Special Problems in Marine Microbiology (USM, once)COA 490/590 – Special Topics in Oceans and Human Health (USM, once)COA 610 – Coastal and Marine Pollution (USM, twice)COA 730 – Oceans and Human Health (USM, four times, team taught via IVN once with Dr. Tim McLean at USM in Hattiesburg and Dr. Mark Hamann at The University of Mississippi in Oxford, MS)COA 690/790 – Bacterial Diseases of Fish (once)COA 690/790 – Diseases of Marine Mammals (once)

Committee Work:UWL: Speakers Committee (Chairman, 1 year); Biology Graduate Committee (Chairman, 6 years); Graduate Student Coordinator; Microbiology Remodeling Committee (Chairman); Merit Evaluation Committee; Promotion Committee; River Studies Center Advisory Committee; River Studies Center Microbiology Laboratory (Chairman, EPA Interim Certification, No. 59- RRIKR); Microbiology Major Committee; Search and Screen Committee (3 candidates); Biology Budget Committee; University Graduate Committee; University Library Committee;

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Audit Review Committee (reviewed 4 M.S. Programs, 1980); Wisconsin Policy Act Committee.UMCP: Microbiology Graduate Admissions Committee; Chancellor's Task Force on Indoor Air Quality.UNH: Marine Programs Building Use Committee (Chairman); Research Roundtable; Research Roundtable Executive Committee; Marine Biology Curriculum Subcommittee; Coastal Ocean Initiative Writing Team.USM: Dean’s Council; Expanded Cabinet; Commission on the Future of the University (1997); Board of Directors, Mississippi-Alabama Sea Grant Consortium (1997-2002); Chair, MASGC Director Search Committee (1998); Chair, MASGC Board of Directors (1999-2000); Campus Advisory Committee, Presidential Search (2002); Chair, University Club Planning Committee (2009-2010); Dept. of Coastal Sciences Faculty Annual Performance Committee (2008-2009); Hardy Hall Renovation Committee (2009-2010); Dean of Science and Technology Search Committee (2009-2010); Academic Council (2010-2011 ); Graduate Council (2011-201 )State of NH: Great Bay Estuarine Research Reserve Working Group; Odiorne Point State Park Leadership Committee; Environmental Monitoring Subcommittee, Gulf of Maine Working Group, CZM; Nonpoint Source Advisory Committee, State of New Hampshire, DES, Water Supply and Pollution Control Division.State of Mississippi: Beach Monitoring Task Force, State of MS DEQ (1997- ); Tidelands Trust Fund Review Panel, State of MS DMR (1997-2004); Chair, Chief Academic Officers, Mississippi Institutions of Higher Learning (2006-2007); The Governor’s Mississippi Gulf of Mexico Commission (2010- ).National: Board of Directors, Northeast Aquaculture Center (1987-1990); Board of Directors, Marine Division, NASULGC (1987-1990); Executive Committee, Council of Sea Grant Direc-tors (1988-1990); Sea Grant Task Force (1988-1990); Planning and Advisory Committee, Minority Research Center of Excellence, University of Puerto Rico, Mayaguez, PR (1989-1994); Executive Secretary, Biotechnology Research Subcommittee, Committee on Life Sciences and Health, FCCSET (1991-1993); Organizing Committee, Fallen Leaf Lake Conference, Microbial Ecology and Biological Control (1993-1994); Co-chair, Marine Biotechnology and Aquaculture Working Group, BRS/CFS/NSTC (1993-1995); Member, Environmental Biotechnology Working Group, BRS/CFS/NSTC (1993-1995); Executive Board, U.S. Federation for Culture Collections, (1994-1997); Chair, Bioremediation Working Group, BRS/CFS/NSTC (1995-97); Member, Environmental Technology Working Group, CENR/NSTC (1995-97); Member, Executive Committee, U.S. EPA Bioremediation Action Committee (1995-96); Board of Governors, Consortium for Oceanic Research and Education (1997-2002); Board of Directors, National Association of Marine Laboratories (1997- 2002); Public Policy Committee, CORE (1998-2002); Committee on the Ocean’s Role in Human Health, Ocean Studies Board, NRC/NAS (1998); National Advisory Committee on Microbiological Criteria for Foods, USDA (1998-2000); Committee on the Assessment of Regional Marine Research Programs, Ocean Studies Board, NRC/NAS (1999); Committee on Climate, Infectious Diseases, and Human Health, Board on Atmospheric Sciences and Climate, NRC/NAS (1999-2000); Co-chair, Board on Oceans and Atmosphere, NASULGC (1999-2000); Ocean Studies Board, National Research Council, National Academy of Sciences (2000-2002); Vice-chair, Board of Governors, CORE (2001- 2002); Committee on Marine Biotechnology: Biomedical Applications of Marine Natural Products, Ocean Studies Board, NAS/NRC (2001-2002); Member, Science Advisory Panel, U.S. Commission on Ocean Policy (2002-2003); U.S. National Organizing Committee, 2005 Congresses of the International Union for Microbiological Societies (2002-2005); U.S. National Committee for the International Union of Microbiological Societies (2001-2004); Chair,

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National Advisory Panel, Oceans and Human Health Initiative, NOS/NOAA (2 terms, 2006-2009 & 2009-2012); Science Advisor, Joint Ocean Commission Initiative (2006- ).International: Represent U.S. DOE on the Ad Hoc Group of Government Experts on Biotechnology for a Clean Environment, Directorate of Science, Technology, and Industry, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) (1993-1995); Member, U.S. Steering Committee for E.C.-U.S. Workshop on Environmental Biotechnology (1994); U.S. Delegate, Ad Hoc Task Force on Bioremediation and Bioprevention Research and Development, OECD, Paris, France (1995); Head of U.S. Delegation and Co-chair, OECD Workshop '95 Amsterdam on Bioremediation (1995); Member, U.S. Science and Technology Committee, Gore-Mbeke Bilateral National Commission, Pretoria, South Africa (1995-96); Head of U.S. Organizing Committee, OECD Workshop Mexico on Water Biotechnology (1996); Member, U.S. Delegation, OECD Workshop Tokyo ‘99 on Scientific and Technological Infrastructure (1999); Member, International Organizing Committee, International Marine Biotechnology Conference 2000 (1999-2000); Vice Chair and Head of U.S. Delegation, Task Force on Biological Resource Centers, OECD (1999-2001); U.S. Delegate, Working Party on Biotechnology, OECD, Paris, FR (2000); Member, Working Group on Human Health Related Biotechnologies Drafting Group, Safer Drinking Water, OECD (1999-2001); Chair, Focus Group 1, Task Force on Biological Resource Centers, OECD (2001-2003); Member, Ad hoc Steering Group, Emerging Risks to Drinking Water Supplies, OECD (2002-2004); Consultant, OECD re. genetically modified organisms and environmental biotechnology (2008); Member, Steering Committee, Vibrios in the Environment 2010, Biloxi, MS (2009-2010); Chair, Local Arrangements Committee, Vibrios in the Environment 2010, Biloxi, MS (2009-2010);

Graduate Advising (Major Professor):1. Kolar, G.W. Description of Pseudomonas aenacaerulea sp. nov., a blue pigmented fluorescent

pseudomonad. M.S. Thesis, 1974, UW-La Crosse.

2. Christianson, G.G. Microbial removal of 3-trifluoromethyl-4- nitrophenol from culture media. M.S. Thesis, 1977, UW-La Crosse.

3. Madramootoo-Pellett, S. Distribution of Pseudomonas aeruginosa in Navigation Pool No. 8 of the Upper Mississippi River. M.S. Thesis, 1977, UW-La Crosse.

4. Stetzer, G.W. Biological and clinical significance of IgE. M.S. Seminar Paper (M.S. with non-thesis option), 1977, UW-La Crosse.

5. Walker, P.J. Distribution of Yersinia enterocolitica in a swine farm watershed. M.S. Thesis, 1980, UW-La Crosse.

6. Mach, P.A. R plasmid transfer of antibiotic resistance in a wastewater treatment plant. M.S. Thesis, 1980, UW-La Crosse.

7. LaLiberte, P.J. In-situ survival of Escherichia coli in lake bottom sediment. M.S. Thesis, 1981, UW-La Crosse. (now a DNR Basin Supervisor with Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, Eau Claire,WI)

8. Youngren, B.L. Anaerobic bacteria: direct gas-liquid chromatography of animal model and

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clinical pus specimens. M.S. Thesis, 1981, UW-La Crosse. (now at the Gene Regulation and Chromosome Biology Laboratory, National Cancer Institute, CCR, NCI-Frederick, Frederick, MD)

9. Hill, G.A. Examination of lake water and lake bottom sediment for the presence of Campylobacter jejuni. M.S. Thesis, 1982, UW-La Crosse.

10. O'Neill, K.R. Ecology and characterization of Vibrio vulnificus from the Great Bay Estuary of Maine and New Hampshire. M.S. Thesis, 1991. Univ. of New Hampshire. (Ms. O’Neill received a Ph.D. from Univ. of Maryland in 1997)

11. Phillips, A.M.B. Investigating Vibrio parahaemolyticus incidence in Gulf Coast water and underlying oysters (Crassostrea virginica) using remote sensing: A comparative study of archived and real-time data for risk assessment. M.S. Thesis, 2005, The Univ. of Southern Mississippi. (now a Project Scientist at AgTech Products Inc., Waukesha, WI)

12. Noriea, Nicholas F., III. Genetic Variation in Potentially Virulent Vibrio parahaemolyticus from the Northern Gulf of Mexico. Ph.D. Dissertation, 2012, The Univ. of Southern Mississippi. (now a post doc at NIH/NIAID in Hamilton, MT)

13. Griffitt, Kimberly J. Improved detection methods for selected Vibrio species in the marine aquatic environment. M.S. Thesis, 2012, The Univ. of Southern Mississippi. (now a medical genetics technician at Kessler Air Force Base, Biloxi, MS)

14. Berutti, Tracy. Variations of Vibrio populations in Pacific white shrimp, Litopenaeus vannamei, aquaculture raceways. M.S. Thesis, 2013, The Univ. of Southern Mississippi. (now a microbiologist with the USDA-FSIS at the Eastern Lab in Athens, GA)

15. Williams, Rachelle Cooley. Bacteria isolated from bottlenose dolphins. (Ph.D. student, started Fall 2009; converted to a M.S. in Science Education in Fall 2013, M.S. Thesis, 2014)

16. Russo, Corey. Viruses and bacteria infecting bottlenose dolphins, Tursiops truncatus, as determined by microbiomics. (Ph.D. student, started Spring 2011)

17. Shen, Shuo “Eagle”. Antibiotic and metal resistance (Ph.D. student, started Spring 2011)

18. Yang, Yimo “Gabrielle”. Microbiomics of elasmobranchs in the Gulf of Mexico. (M.S. student, started Fall 2014)

19. Doucette, Kaitlin Kelly. The elasmobranch-microbe relationship: trimethylamine n-oxide synthesis, urea hydrolysis, and microbe-osmolyte interactions in the Atlantic stingray, Dasyatis sabina. M.S. Thesis, Fall 2016, The Univ. of Southern Mississippi. (has applied for a Ph.D. program at the University of Manitoba, Canada)

Postdoctoral Fellows:Dr. Crystal N. Johnson. B.S., Cell and Molecular Biology, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA,

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1997; Ph.D., Microbiology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, 2004; Postdoctoral Fellow, Pathology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, 2004-2005; Postdoctoral Fellow, Marine Microbiology, The University of Southern Mississippi, 2005-2006; appointed Research Assistant Professor, Department of Coastal Sciences, The University of Southern Mississippi, 2006; appointed Assistant Professor, Louisiana State University, 2009, promoted to Associate Professor and tenured, 2015.

Undergraduate Interns:Samantha L. Allen, USM, 2012Hang Nguyen, USM, 2012Robert Buntyn, USU, 2013Amanda Blackburn, State University of New York at Potsdam, 2014Kelli Palaka, Colgate University, 2014Adam Schneider, Loyola University, 2015

Laboratory Managers:Kimberly J. Griffitt, 2009-2012Adrienne R. Flowers, 2012-2013Mercedes Taylor, 2013-2014

Past and Present Collaborations:Dr. Rita R. Colwell, University of MarylandDr. David C. White, University of Tennessee and Oak Ridge National Laboratory (deceased)Dr. Carl R. Woese, University of Illinois (deceased)Dr. Samuel H. Gruber, University of MiamiDr. David H. Attaway, National Sea Grant OfficeDr. Ronald M. Atlas, University of LouisvilleDr. Angelo DePaola, Gulf Coast Seafood Laboratory, U.S. FDAMr. John Bowers, Division of Mathematics, U.S. FDADr. Aaron L. Mills, University of VirginiaDr. Kenneth H. Nealson, University of Southern CaliforniaDr. R.D. Ellender, The University of Southern MississippiDr. Joan B. Rose. Michigan State UniversityDr. Amy E. Wright, Harbor Branch Oceanographic InstitutionDr. Anwar Huq, University of MarylandDr. Henry Williams, Florida A&M UniversityDr. Richard W. Gould, Ocean Optics Section, Naval Research Laboratory, Stennis Space CenterDr. Chris Whitehouse, U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious DiseasesDr. R. Bradley Sack, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins UniversityDr. Edward Laws, Louisiana State UniversityDr. Mark Strom, NOAA/NMFS Northwest Fisheries Science CenterDr. Rohinee Paranjpye, NOAA/NMFS Northwest Fisheries Science CenterDr. Eric R. Hoffmayer, NOAA/NMFS PascagoulaDr. Greg Carter, The University of Southern MississippiDr. Carlos Del Castillo, Applied Physics Laboratory, Johns Hopkins UniversityMs. Callie M. Hall, NASA Stennis Space CenterDr. Anita Wright, University of Florida

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Dr. Joanna Mott, Texas A&M Corpus ChristiDr. Valerie J. Harwood, University of South FloridaDr. Crystal N. Johnson, Louisiana State UniversityDr. Terry Hazen, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, now at UT KnoxvilleDr. Sandra McLellan, University of Wisconsin-MilwaukeeDr. Jim Oliver, UNC CharlotteDr. M.L. Sogin, Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MADr. Mark Hamann, University of MississippiDr. Monty Graham, The University of Southern Mississippi Dr. Karen E. Nelson, J. Craig Venter Institute, Rockville, MD and San Diego, CADr. Pamela Morris, Baruch Lab., University of South CarolinaDr. Tracy Collier, NOAA Oceans and Human HealthDr. Paul Sandifer, NOAA NOS Chief Science AdvisorJuli Trtanj, NOAA Oceans and Human HealthDr. Helena Solo-Gabriele, University of MiamiDr. Okechukwu Ekenna, Singing River Hospital System and University of South AlabamaDr. Lisa Plano, University of MiamiDr. Daniel H. Haft, J. Craig Venter Institute, Rockville, MDDr. Manolito Torralba, J. Craig Venter Institute, Rockville, MD

Consultation:Consultant: Cargill Heating and Air Conditioning Co., La Crosse, WI, re: microbial fouling of

cooling water, 1973-1975.Consultant: Moen, Sheehan, Meyer, and Henke, Ltd., La Crosse, WI, re: public health hazards

of sewage sludge disposal, 1974.Witness: Citizens for a Clean Mississippi, Durand, WI, re: NPDES discharge permit

hearing, Minneapolis-St. Paul, MWCC, St. Paul, MN, 1977.Consultant: City Health Lab., La Crosse, WI, re: City of La Crosse surface water testing

program, 1975-1981.Consultant: Schiltz Farms, Inc., La Crescent, MN, re: milk spoilage, 1977.Consultant: Davy Engineering Co., Inc., La Crosse, WI, re: water and wastewater analysis

program, 1975-1981.Consultant: Mr. Leo Le Mieux, Ettrick, WI, re: epidemiological study of pig deaths due to

Salmonella enteritidis, 1979.Consultant Venable, Baetjer, & Howard, Baltimore, MD, re: bacterial contamination of well & Witness: water, 1983-1984.Consultant: JRB Associates, McLean, VA, re: pathogenic microorganisms in pharmaceutical/

biologics wastewater, 1984-1985.Consultant: U.S. Geological Survey, Reston, VA, re: viable bacteria in deep subsurface core

samples, 1985-1986.Consultant: Mogul, Glen Burnie, MD, re: odor problem in heat exchanger water, 1986.Consultant: Sons of Neptune Ltd., Scarborough, United Kingdom, re: long sewage outfall

proposed for Scalby Mills, 1986-present.Consultant: Camp, Dresser & McKee, Boston, MA, re: Technical Review Committee, Outfall

Site Selection, MWRA (Deer Island) Secondary Treatment Facilities Plan, 1987-1988.

Consultant: Academy of Applied Science, Concord, NH, re: Exploring Future Frontiers in the

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Sciences and Humanities - The Ocean, 1987-1988.Consultant: Malibu Township Council, Malibu, CA, re: sewage treatment and pathogenic

microorganism survival in coastal oceans, 1989-1990.Consultant Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund, Inc., Honolulu, HI, re: Sand Island and & Witness: Honouliuli Wastewater Treatment Plant litigations, U.S. Federal District Court,

Honolulu, 1990-1993.Consultant: Malibu Township Council, Malibu, CA, re: probono consultant for water and

wastewater quality issues, 1991-2000.Consultant: National Aquarium at Baltimore, Baltimore, MD, re: remodeling of the shark tank

(Open Ocean exhibit), 1991.Consultant: U.S. Environmental Agency, Office of Research and Development, Title 42

search for an environmental microbiologist and a microbial risk assessor, 2006.Consultant: Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, Paris, France, re.

genetically modified organisms and environmental biotechnology (one of two U.S. consultants along with Dr. Ron Atlas), 2008.

Consultant: Subcontract from Stratus Consulting, Contractor for the Louisiana Oil Spill Coordinator’s Office, National Resource Damage Assessment, 2012-

Consultant: Arnold & Itkin LLP, Trial Lawyers, Houston, TX. Consultant for necrotizing fasciitis caused by Vibrio vulnificus, 2016.

Consultant: Gregorio, Chafin & Johnson, LLC, Shreveport, LA. Consultant for necrotizing fasciitis caused by Vibrio vulnificus, 2016.

Scientific Society Memberships:American Society for Microbiology (1967-present); Society for General Microbiology (1968-1979); Ecological Society of America (1968-1972); Sigma Xi (1969-present); North American Benthological Society (1971-1979); Water Pollution Control Federation (1979-1981); American Elasmobranch Society (charter member, 1984-1992); American Society of Limnology and Oceanography (1985-1990), American Association for the Advancement of Science (1987-present); The Oceanographic Society (1988-1990;1999-present), American Geophysical Union (1989-1990); Estuarine Research Federation (1989-1994); United States Federation for Culture Collections (1992-2005); American Public Health Association (2009-2010); International Society for Microbial Ecology (2009-present); Society for Applied Microbiology (2012-present).

Scientific Society Offices and Committees:Treasurer, American Elasmobranch Society (1985-1989); General Meeting Program Committee, American Academy of Microbiology (1993-2000); Executive Board, U.S. Federation for Culture Collections (1994-2003); J. Roger Porter Award Nominating Committee, American Academy of Microbiology (1997-2000); Chair, Communications Committee, American Society for Microbiology (3 3-year terms, 1997-2006); Vice President, United States Federation for Culture Collections (1998-2000); Nominating Committee for 2001-2002 Officers, ASM, (1999-2000); President, United States Federation for Culture Collections (2000-2002); Member, PSAB Committee on Environmental Microbiology, American Society for Microbiology (2 3-year terms, 2006-2012 ); Vice Co-Chair, Gordon Research Conference on Oceans and Human Health (2008-2010); Chair, Gordon Research Conference on Oceans and Human Health (2010-2012); Member, ASM Public and Scientific Affairs Board (PSAB, 2012-2015); Chair, ASM PSAB Committee on Environmental Microbiology (2012-2015).

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Ocean Cruises:R/V ENDEAVOR (EN68, 13-17 June 1981), Barbados to Bermuda, Scientist.R/V MT. MITCHELL (4-12 February 1982), Coastal waters of Puerto Rico and over the Puerto

Rico Trench, Scientist.R/V CAPE HATTERAS (CH-11-82, 4-7 May 1982), Continental shelf off Cape Hatteras, NC,

Chief Scientist.R/V CAPE FLORIDA (CF 8214, 3-20 November 1982), Coastal waters of Puerto Rico and over

the Puerto Rico Trench, Scientist.R/V CAPE FLORIDA (CF 8406, 24 May-10 June 1984), Coastal waters of Bimini, Bahamas,

Scientist.R/V RIDGELY WARFIELD, Coordinator of monthly UMCP cruises on the Chesapeake Bay,

1982-1987, Chief Scientist on several cruises.R/V JERE A. CHASE, selected day cruises, administrative responsibility for the ship budget and

crew (1987-1990).R/V TOMMY MUNRO, selected day cruises, administrative responsibility for the ship budget

and crew (1997-2007).R/V FERREL, Former Ph.D. student Marcia Pendleton participated in three BP cruises to collect

water samples in and around the waters above the Deepwater Horizon blowout (2010)

Referee and/or Editorial Board for:AIMS Microbiology (Editorial Board, 2015- )Annals of Marine Biology and Research (Editorial Board, 2014- )Antonie van Leeuwenhoek Intl. Journal of General and Molecular Microbiology (referee)Applied and Environmental Microbiology (Editorial Board, two terms, 1988-90 and 1991-1993) BioScience (referee)Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences (referee)Canadian Journal of Microbiology (referee)Chemical & Engineering News (referee)Diseases of Aquatic Organisms (referee)Environmental Health Perspectives (referee)Environmental Microbiology Reports (referee)Environmental Science & Technology (referee)Estuaries (Associate Editor, 1989-1993)FEMS Microbial Ecology (referee)Foodborne Pathogens and Disease (referee)Frontiers in Microbiology, Aquatic MicrobiologyInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (referee)International Journal of Food Microbiology (referee)International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology (referee)International Journal of Systematic Bacteriology (referee)International Society for Microbial Ecology Journal (referee)Journal of Clinical Microbiology (referee)Journal of Marine Biology Current Research (Editorial Board, 2015- )Journal of Microbiological Methods (referee)Microbial Ecology (referee; Editorial Board, 2009- )Microbial Ecology (Guest Editor of a Special Issue on Oceans and Human Health, 2012)Microbiological Research (referee)

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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (referee and editor)Science (referee)Science Progress (referee)

Miscellaneous Organizations, Awards, and Community Service:National Honor Society (Keota Community H.S., 1960); Iowa State Bar Assoc. Citizenship Award (Keota Community H.S., 1962); National Eagle Scout Association (Eagle Scout, 1962); Phi Kappa Psi (Social Frat., Univ. of Iowa, 1962-64); Elder, First Presbyterian Church, La Crosse, WI (1976-80); Executive Board, Gateway Area Council (Boy Scout Chr., 1977-79; VP, 1979-80); Chair, Staff-Parish Relations Committee, United Methodist Church (Laurel, MD, 1986-87); Committee Member, Boy Scout Troop 271 (Ocean Springs, MS, 1997- 99); Board of Directors, Ocean Springs Chamber of Commerce (Ocean Springs, MS, 1999-2002); Chair, 2000 Scout Exposition, Biloxi Bay; Rotary International (Hattiesburg, MS, 2002-2003; Gulfport, MS, 2003); Education Committee, Area Development Partnership (Hattiesburg, 2003-2004); Spanish Trail District Scout Chairman (2005); Graveline Bayou Dredging Committee (Gautier, MS 2010- ).

Personal:Born: September 26, 1944, Keota, IowaWife: Beverly I. Stutzman GrimesChildren: Bret D. (DOB 10/66), Terence H. (DOB 9/71), Christopher B. (DOB 4/74), Darin J. (DOB 4/82), Lauren J. (DOB 8/86), Daniel D. Adams (stepson, DOB 8/84)

Jay and Bev Grimes Distinguished Lecturer Series:January 2015, Hans W. Paerl, Ph.D., Kenan Professor of Marine and Environmental Sciences, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, Institute of Marine Sciences, “Harmful algal blooms in a human and climatically impacted world: What’s manageable and what’s not?”April 2014, Bill Hogarth, Ph.D., Director, Florida Institute of Oceanography, and former Director, NOAA/NMFS, “U.S. Fisheries: Emphasis on the Gulf of Mexico”April 2013, Karen E. Nelson, Ph.D., President, J. Craig Venter Institute, "Omics – Insights into Your World and Mine"July 2011, Terry C. Hazen, Ph.D., Head, Center for Environmental Biotechnology at DOE’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, “Can Mother Nature Take a Punch? Microbes and the BP Oil Spill in the Gulf”April 2009, Rita R. Colwell, Ph.D., D.Sc., Distinguished University Professor, University of Maryland College Park and Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, “Oceans, Climate, Infectious Diseases and Human Health”December 2007, James D. Oliver, Ph.D., Cone Distinguished Professor for Teaching, University of North Carolina Charlotte, “Vibrio vulnificus: From Disease to Ecology to In Situ Gene Expression”

-------------Revised 5/30/2017