by | Jul 13, 2020 | 0 comments

Undergraduate Students Present Research to the Marine Science Center Community

The undergraduate research capacity of the Marine Science Center is one of the cornerstones of the program and community. Each semester, students from Northeastern’s renowned co-op program join the MSC community, working with research labs and program teams to increase research productivity and breadth and to provide invaluable learning experiences for the students. This past semester’s co-op students were able to overcome the challenges and upheavals of COVID-19 and presented their recent research at the biannual Undergraduate Research Symposium last month. The Symposium, co-hosted by the Marine Science Center’s Outreach Program and Ocean Genome Legacy Center, was held virtually for the first time this semester, and over 40 community members tuned in via Zoom to learn from and support these undergraduate researchers.  

Lark Parmalee, a capstone student in the Helmuth Lab, compared biodiversity indices of the rocky intertidal generated by in situ quadrats and photo quadrats. In situ quadrats measured higher levels of biodiversity, photo quadrats remain an important tool for rapid and remote data collection.  

Lizzy Soranno, a co-op with the Ocean Genome Legacy Center, showed that preservative pH is an important determinant of DNA preservation for tissues of five aquatic invertebrate species stored in an EDTA-based DNA preservative. 

Tess Mahon Kuzin, a co-op with the Outreach Program, reflected on the educational programs she helped coordinate, connecting MSC research and STEM with area schools. with at the Johnson Elementary School, including Whale Day, the High School Marine Science Symposium, and resources she helped develop for remote learning. 

Ffion Titmuss, a co-op in the Lotterhos Lab, modeled plasticity as a response to rapid global change, particularly temporally fluctuating environments. They showed that higher migration rates and higher correlations between an individual’s environments of development and selection both increased plasticity in populations. 

Brynnydd Hamilton, a co-op from the Muñoz Earth Surface Systems Lab, explained how she used Google Earth satellite imagery and the Global Flood Awareness System to determine changes in discharge in the Mississippi River over the last 1500 years. She found that evaporation may be the primary driver behind changes in discharge over time.  

Congratulations to all of these scholars for their contributions to MSC research! 

RECENT NEWS BRIEFS

Meet OGL’s new faces—and their new projects!

This month, OGL is welcoming a new postdoctoral fellow and two new co-op students! Did you know that some bacteria stab their competitors with poison darts? In her PhD research at UNC Chapel Hill, Dr. Lauren Speare showed how glowing symbionts use this strategy to...

New Tools for Teachers

Science teachers are awesome! Middle and high school teachers are on the front lines of science education, teaching a generation that not only can save our planet, but must. To do our small part to help these heroes, Ocean Genome Legacy and the Outreach Program at...

Mystery Fish Identified!

On a nighttime dive on a spectacular shallow reef in Cozumel, Mexico, underwater photographer Robert Stansfield spied something in the inky darkness he had never seen before: a tiny, transparent fish with bright markings, devilish eyes, and a gaping mouth...

Spooky Creatures at OGL!

It’s that time of year again, when werewolves, goblins, and vampires skulk in the shadows. This Halloween, we present some of the spookiest marine creatures lurking in the OGL collection! Barreleye (Macropinna microstoma) The barreleye must have a lot of role models,...

OGL in the New York Times

These are difficult times, and I hope that you and your loved ones are healthy and protecting yourselves. During this unprecedented moment in our lives, the news can be hard to read, and so it is great to share a story with a little more uplifting content. One of...

X