By Keith O'Brien, Globe Correspondent | November 7, 2005
The room is filled with marine life: fiddler crabs and moon snails, dogfish and flounder. There are clams stacked up by the dozen, skates hiding in the sand, and signs that require second looks. ''Toadfish infected with lice," one sign says. ''Do not touch."
But Joe DeGiorgis, 41, walks right past it all. He has come to the Marine Resource Center in Woods Hole for one thing and one thing only.
''The squid are here," he calls out, pointing to a large oval tank. ''My favorite guys."
![]() Joe DeGiorgis FACT SHEET Home: Raised in Pittsfield, DeGiorgis now splits his time between Woods Hole and Bethesda, Md. Family: Single; his parents now live in Stockbridge. Education: Earned a bachelor's degree in marine ecology from the Florida Institute of Technology in 1986 and a doctorate in cell and molecular biology from Brown University in 2001. Squid hazards: Squid will bite, he says, and can draw blood, if they can latch on to a finger or hand with their tentacles. That's why he's careful in how he handles them. But there's little one can do to avoid getting ''inked" by an angry squid. ''Every piece of clothing that I have has that squid ink on it," he says. The worst part: DeGiorgis estimates he has dissected thousands of squid. But he says he has never gotten over the guilt involved with catching and killing the squid. ''I've done a lot of them," he says, ''but you never get used to it." His science: For decades, scientists have studied squid to learn more about how the nervous system works -- the very essence of how we move and think. The squid makes for a good model because of its giant axon, a highway on which neurological information travels, which is far bigger than the axons in the human body. DeGiorgis is especially interested in the motors that move information up and down these highways. |