The BMC Blog Network has moved to the Research Communities.

Your privacy, your choice

We use essential cookies to make sure the site can function. We also use optional cookies for advertising, personalisation of content, usage analysis, and social media.

By accepting optional cookies, you consent to the processing of your personal data - including transfers to third parties. Some third parties are outside of the European Economic Area, with varying standards of data protection.

See our privacy policy for more information on the use of your personal data.

for further information and to change your choices.

BioMed Central on Twitter BioMed Central on Facebook
  • About
  • Blogs
    • On Biology
    • On Medicine
    • On Health
    • On Society
    • On Physical Sciences
    • Research in progress blog
    • BMC Series blog
    • BugBitten
  • Topics
    • Biology
    • Medicine
    • Health
    • Chemistry
    • Physics
    • Developing World
    • Open Access
    • Technology
    • Publishing
MENU
MENU
  • About
  • Blogs ►
    • On Biology
    • On Medicine
    • On Health
    • On Society
    • On Physical Sciences
    • Research in progress blog
    • BMC Series blog
    • BugBitten
  • Topics ►
    • Biology
    • Medicine
    • Health
    • Chemistry
    • Physics
    • Developing World
    • Open Access
    • Technology
    • Publishing

Author Profile

  • About
  • Latest Posts
Michael Oellerman
Michael Oellerman
Michael Oellerman is currently an R&D scientist at Loligo Systems. He carried out his PhD at Alfred-Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research, University of Bremen, studying cephalopod hemocyanin function and evolution.
Michael Oellerman
Latest posts by Michael Oellerman (see all)
  • Blue blood on ice: Blood pigment helps octopods sustain oxygen supply at freezing temperatures - 18th March 2015

Blue blood on ice: Blood pigment helps octopods sustain oxygen supply at freezing temperatures

Antarctic octopod

18/03/2015

On Biology

New research published in Frontiers in Zoology has shown that Antarctic octopods have unexpectedly high levels of the blood pigment hemocyanin. Michael… Read more »

Our blogs

  • Research in progress blog
  • BMC Series blog
  • BugBitten
  • GigaBlog (archived)
  • On Biology
  • On Health
  • On Medicine
  • On Physical Sciences
  • On Society

Latest BioMed Central Articles

Visit BioMed Central >

About

  • About our blog network
  • Copyright information
  • Community Guidelines
  • About BioMed Central

Network Blogs

  • On Biology
  • On Medicine
  • On Health
  • On Society
  • On Physical Sciences
  • Research in progress blog
  • BMC Series blog
  • Bugbitten

Related Blogs

  • SpringerOpen blog

Network Topics

  • Biology
  • Medicine
  • Health
  • Developing World
  • Open Access
  • Technology
  • Publishing

Community

  • Network RSS Feeds
  • Follow us on Twitter
  • Follow us on Facebook
  • Follow us on LinkedIn
  • Follow us on YouTube

By continuing to use this website, you agree to our Terms and Conditions, Community Guidelines, Privacy statement and Cookies policy.

Springer Nature logo

© 2024 BioMed Central Ltd unless otherwise stated. Part of Springer Nature.