News
                        Sun, Sept 17 2017
ANIMAL PAIN - PhD course
PhD course 
Animal pain 5-9 March 2018 (5 ECTS) - Copenhagen - Denmark  
Objectives 
To give PhD-students an overview of the concept of animal pain from a biological perspective. The course is based on presentations and lectures by internationally recognised researchers and practitioners, participants presenting relevant parts of their projects, combined with group work and plenary discussions. The final part of the course constitutes a written project.
Target group 
PhD students and researchers within science, veterinary, agricultural and health sciences working with animals, including animal model studies, experimentation, in zoo and animal parks, and with scientific questions related to animal pain.
Key lectures:
Prof. Craig B. Johnson, Massey University, New Zealand: What is pain and who feels it – from fetus to the end of life?
Prof. Robert Elwood, Queen’s University Belfast, United Kingdom: Comparative aspects of animal pain – how can we detect it?
Ass. Prof. Klas Abelson, University of Copenhagen, Denmark: The use of animal models to develop pain-relieving drugs
Registration
The course is organized by Aarhus University and University of Copenhagen. For more information about registration at: http://projects.au.dk/animal-pain/ 
 
Photos by Liat Romme Thomsen (Aarhus University), Pierpaolo Di Giminiani (University of Newcastle) and
Janne Hansen (Aarhus University)
                        Fri, Aug 18 2017
New employee
We are happy to announce the employment of our new product specialist, Andreas Mørck.
Andreas has a background as a marine biologist from University of Southern Denmark (Odense, Denmark) specializing in fish physiology and osmoregulation. Throughout his studies, he focused on the importance of water-transporting proteins, e.g. aquaporins and claudins, during water and salt transport in the intestines and kidneys of fish. The work of his bachelor project resulted in a publication on osmoregulation in the three-spined stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus L.). And while working on his Master thesis, Andreas produced excellent results on the expression of claudins in the intestines of Japanese ricefish (Oryzias latipes) using state-of-the-art STED-nanoscopy and confocal microscopy.
On a less scientific note, Andreas also holds a MA in Wildlife Filmmaking in collaboration with BBC from University of the West of England as he has been a keen nature photographer for many years. Moreover, Andreas has been a nature communicator at Fjord&Bælt, a teaching-instructor in biology at SDU, Odense, and is a co-author on a Danish Christmas-musical.
Andreas is pleased to have joined the Loligo® Systems team. He mentions that he is “exited and eager to contribute to the continuous growth of Loligo® Systems”. “I had a pleasant welcome and felt as an essential part of the team within the first hour of my first working day!” says Andreas as he continuous being Loligo® Systems new product specialist.
                        Fri, Aug 18 2017
Loligo® featuring in new papers
We are facing exciting times at Loligo® Systems.
As of August 2017, we have added 18 new references to our Published papers section. Loligo® products thus feature in 40+ research papers in 2017 alone and in +500 papers including previous years.
Our products are being used in research projects all around the globe. The 18 new research paper references span a rich variety of topics from behavior of the Japanese stone crab (Charybdis japonica), to metabolic rates and aerobic metabolic scope in shortnose sturgeon (Acipenser brevirostrum) to effects of oil sands process-affected water on Rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) and more.
The team at Loligo® Systems congratulates all the researchers and their hard work.