Mellon Environmental Research Initiative
Student Research Associates
2008 - 2010
Ryan Bailey
Skidmore College
Major: Environmental Studies/Economics
Graduation Date: Spring 2009
Email: rbailey@skidmore.edu
Research
Project: What forces for or against smart
growth are the most dominant in local community planning? Through preliminary
research we have identified five challenges to planning for smart growth and
five forces for smart growth that will be examined over the next two years to
determine which has the greatest influence on local planning. These forces
highlight the contrast between the planning experts and the local governments
that are attempting to implement smart growth into their community.
Evan Blankenship
Lewis & Clark College
Major: Environmental Studies
Graduation Date: Spring 2009
Research
Project: Why is it that people continue
live in a hazardous wasteland even after it seems clear that the land and air
are poisoning them? How can a population actively participate in the
degradation of their health and livelihoods? Is there a limit to what people
can allow before they will realize their mistakes? These questions each feel
common and pertinent in a world seemingly tipping towards environmental crisis.
However, there is an overarching theme between them that I believe is more
important to address. The question I want to look at is how people understand
their environments, looking especially at what factors shape the sense of being
in crisis.
Erin Brogan
Northwestern College
Major: Biology/Ecological Studies
Graduation Date: Spring 2010
Email: ebrogan@nwciowa.edu
Research
Project: In our research, we are
specifically interested in the effects of invasive species, both to the prairie
and forested environments they invade and also to the recreational and
agricultural spaces they invade. We would like to focus mostly on the effects
of the one to several of the following vegetative invasives: Leafy Spurge (Euphorbia
esula), Eastern Red Cedar (Juniperus
virginiana), Common Buckthorn (Rhamnus
cathartica), and Downy Brome (Bromus
tectorum).
Jordan Brown
SUNY–Environmental
Science and Forestry
Major: Environmental and
Forest Biology
Graduation Date: Spring 2009
Email: jbrown14@syr.edu
Research
Project: We plan to assess the utility of
carbon isotopes to trace attenuation of manure contamination to stream water in
the Skaneateles Lake Watershed. Skaneateles Lake serves as the primary drinking
water supply to the Syracuse NY metropolitan area.
Krystle Castillo
Allegheny College
Major: Environmental Studies
Graduation Date: Spring 2009
Email: castilk@allegheny.edu
Research
Project: There is a need for a
comprehensive initiative in Crawford County to address childhood exposures
within the home. The Healthy Homes—Healthy Children program has several
broad goals, and to address these concerns we have developed the five following
objectives: 1) Collect baseline data on regional childhood environmental health
issues; 2) Provide families with opportunities for free, in-home healthy home
assessments; 3) Conduct community outreach efforts to address the prevention of
childhood environmental diseases; 4) Develop hands-on educational activities
about regional environmental health concerns; 5) Reduce childhood environmental
health exposures.
Garwen Chen
Pomona College
Major: Environmental
Analysis/Biology
Graduation Date: Spring 2009
Email: garwen.chen@pomona.edu
Research
Project: I will be doing a chemical and biological soil survey in Costa Rica at the Hacienda Baru Nature Reserve and Firestone Center for Restoration Ecology to provide a data base for resource conservation purposes. This will include an intensive sampling, GPS mapping and on-site autoclaving routine, followed by analytical work and interpretive analysis. The results will be conveyed to Park Management at the Baru Rainforest and adjoining firestone staff. Of particular interest will be the influence of elevation, slope, substrate, and land use practice on soil characteristics as well as an examination on invertebrate classification in the different types of soils.
Darren Daly
Adelphi
University
Major: Environmental Studies
Graduation Date: Spring 2010
Email: darrendaly@adelphi.edu
Research
Project: Along the New Jersey shelf, sand
ridges have been observed. The objective of this project is to determine the
nature of these features. There are two theories to explain them: either they
are barrier islands stranded when sea level rose or sand waves that were formed
more recently by currents. I am going to investigate the environment of
deposition. This will provide insight into the depositional conditions of the
site and their development.
Jacob Hendee
University
of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Major: Natural Resources
Graduation Date: Spring 2010
Email: jhendee2@uiuc.edu
Research
Project: The forestry profession in the
United States faces much uncertainty. Luckert (2006) argues that the profession
has succumbed to BehanÕs (1966) ÒMyth of the Omnipotent Forester.Ó Behan warned
that professional foresters could not Òtell the public how their land could be
managed,Ó but instead, ÒWe must have enough sense to stand up and listen to the
public, and to work with it in setting forest land objectives. Then as
professional foresters we can supply the technological means to these
sociological ends, and not confuse the one with the other.Ó Luckert (2006)
cites declining enrollments, declining association membership, and declining
favorable perceptions of foresters as evidence of an Òidentity crisisÓ within
the profession. Fedkiw (2007) echoes these thoughts. Jones, Luloff, and Finley
(1995); Bensel (2001); Rosen (1995) and others show that non-industrial private
landowners (NIPF) rarely utilize the resources of professional foresters,
raising the question of the value that NIPF landowners place in professional
forestry.
Sara Holmes
Ithaca
College
Major: Environmental Studies
Graduation Date: Spring 2009
Email: sholmes1@ithaca.edu
Research
Project: I propose to conduct situated
research to investigate the old Morse Chain Company factory and the associated
contamination on South Hill in Ithaca, N.Y. Situated research is useful for
examining environmental issues because it allows for the focused and
concentrated study of an environmental problem in one location. The findings
then can be applied to a broader context.

Mandy Hulke
Macalester
College
Major: Chemistry
Graduation Date: Spring 2009
Email: ahulke@macalester.edu
Research
Project: The concentrations of toxic
heavy metals in aquatic ecosystems have increased due to human activities.
Currently, the levels are high enough to cause concern. There are no human
dietary restrictions on aquatic organisms, but some people are avoiding certain
types of fish due to high concentrations of metals. Humans are not directly
affected by metal toxicity yet, but many aquatic ecosystem organisms are
starting to show the effects. Some avian species which occupy upper trophic
levels, such as the Common Loon (Gavia Immer), have an increased risk of
poisoning due to long life spans and piscivorous diets. Loons, and other birds,
have a natural defense mechanism against heavy metal poisoning; they excrete
unwanted metals into growing feathers and egg shells. The metals stay
persevered within the feather, which naturally resists decay. This provides a
great record of the environmental conditions of the habitat in which the bird
lived in.
Jenifer
Jackson
Lewis & Clark College
Major: Environmental Studies
Graduation Date: Spring 2010
Email: jenifer@lclark.edu
Research
Project: The water problems of Puebla,
Mexico, recognized during the 1990s, affect most water sources. I will focus on
the contamination of the watershed in which the city of Puebla lies. PueblaÕs
watershed has chemical, physical and biological contamination arising from
industrial and municipal discharge. Physical pollution is defined as
unnaturally high levels of physical particles such as dust, grit, or silt
present. Chemical contamination occurs when there are unnaturally high levels
of chemicals such as mercury, lead, oil and sulfuric acid. Finally, biological
contamination refers to high levels of bacteria. Studies show that there are
anti-bacterial resistant bacteria present in the Atoyac and Alseseca Rivers in
Puebla, which cause diseases in humans. The Alseseca River, which traverses the
city of Puebla, has high amounts of resistant bacteria.
Courtney JnBaptiste
Bethune-Cookman
University
Major: Biology
Graduation Date: Spring 2010
Email: courtney.jnbaptiste@cookman.edu
Research
Project: The largest spring on the St.
JohnÕs River, Blue Spring (in Blue Spring State Park (BSSP) near Orange City,
Florida) taps into an underground aquifer to produce a meandering run of
crystal clear, 73 degree water. The run attracts animals and humans alike,
including a growing population of West Indian Manatees (Trichechus manatus),
such that Blue Spring has become a designated Manatee Refuge and a winter home
(mid-November through March) to a growing population. Coincidently, the spring
run is also an ecological haven for rare species such as the Blue Spring Pygmy
Siltsnail (Cincinnatia parva) and the Blue Spring Hydrobe (Aphaostracon
asthenes). These species have adapted to the unique features of this isolated
environment and are endemic to the habitat.
Alena Kimbrough
University
of Arizona
Major: Geosciences
Graduation Date: Spring 2010
Email: alenak@email.arizona.edu
Research
Project: My research focuses on improving
our understanding of drought in southwestern North America, using records of
past climate from paleoclimatic (proxy) sources. Various proxy records indicate
that during medieval times (roughly 800-1400 A.D.) the southwest experienced
prolonged and intense ÒmegadroughtsÓ that lasted for decades. Likewise, climate
models project that with an increase in temperatures the aridity of this area
will increase as well. A great deal of research has been done on drought in the
broad region of the western US, much of it focused around the late Holocene
period (including medieval times). The data observed so far mainly consists of
that from tree rings and lake sediments, both of which are scarce in low
elevation areas of southwest North America where water resource scarcity is
most acute. A continuous, high-resolution record of climate has not yet been
compiled for the arid, low-elevation southwest, resulting in an inadequate
understanding of climate variability in this region. In this extended research
project I will be analyzing cave speleothems (stalagmites) to address the
timing and severity of medieval drought in southwestern North America and
evaluate how the hydrologic balance was affected in low elevations of this
region. We are hoping to heighten our understanding of how these areas of the
Southwest were affected over the past 1200 years and fill an important gap in the
existing analysis of drought in the Southwest.
Rachael Lipinski
Lewis & Clark College
Major: Environmental Studies/English
Graduation Date: Spring 2009
Email: lipinski@lclark.edu
Research
Project: The questions I want to work
towards answering relate to the connections between political ecology and
narrative. By political ecology, I am referring to the political, social, and
economic factors that influence a given state, and by narrative I am referring
to the story told about a change over time. Different political ecological
factors act as a strong force in creating and changing an environmental state,
but also affect how the story of the changing state is told and interpreted.
Better understanding an environmental change leads to more informed analysis
and, in turn, better human responses to the change. In order to better
understand changing biodiversity in Cuba I would like to study the ways in
which political ecological factors have led to and influenced biodiversity as
well as how these social, political, and economic factors affect the story told
about the change.
Megan Mills-Novoa
Lewis & Clark College
Major: Environmental Studies
and Biology
Graduation Date: Spring 2009
Email: meganm@lclark.edu
Research
Project: The way in which humans gain
sustenance from the earth reflects the basic connection we, as species, have to
our environment. The process and ritual of attaining food within a community
speaks to the location of that community, as well as the culture and history of
that group. We live in a time in which the world is changing rapidly.
Anthropogenic climate change is altering the way in which we, as a race, are
able to cultivate food on a global scale. My research question focuses on how
communities can creatively adapt agriculturally to a changing climate.
Nora
Prior
University
of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Major: Integrative Biology
Graduation Date: Spring 2009
Email: nprior2@uiuc.edu
Research
Project: Recent research (Gillespie et
al., in prep) involving behavioral follows of individually-recognized,
free-ranging red colobus males in Kibale National Park, Uganda has provided
clear evidence that the males engage in therapeutic self-medication against
Oesophagostomum sp. with the bark of African cherry (Prunus africana). This
research project will examine the generality of self-medication in red colobus
by conducting an equivalent study focused on females. More specifically, this
study will attempt to determine whether self-medication is occurring in female
red colobus. Assuming self-medication is occurring, through behavioral follows
we will investigate whether the form or frequency of therapeutic
self-medication displayed differs from that of the males.
Nora Purcell
Warren
Wilson College
Major: Environmental Studies
Graduation Date: Spring 2010
Email: nora.purcell@gmail.com
Research
Project: Panamanian rainforests, famed
for their superlative beauty and biodiversity, are at the epicenter of local
and global forces threatening their existence. Deforestation is perpetuated
through the logging operations of large corporations and the Òslash and burnÓ
agricultural methods of local farmers trapped in the cycle of rural poverty.
While scholars and citizens alike agree that deforestation is ecologically
damaging, gathering accurate and localized data on the wide range of effects
remains an elusive goal. Thus, the over-all question that will guide my
research is: How can the localized effects of tropical deforestation be studied
in new ways through the use of wireless sensor networks?
Vandhana Rabindranath
University
of Nebraska-Lincoln
Major: Environmental Studies
Graduation Year: Spring 2010
Email: vrabind1@gmail.com
Research
Project: In my project, I plan on
researching the Salt Creek tiger beetle (Cicindela nevadica linconiana) and
important environmental factors associated with this federally endangered
species. I would like to get to the bottom of this speciesÕ endangerment and
answer important questions such as Òwhat exactly is causing the endangerment of
this beetle?Ó and Òis its ecosystem degrading?Ó This is a logical thought
because the Salt Creek tiger beetle is considered an indicator species.
Wherever it is present and thriving, a healthy saline marsh exists. Saline
marshes are characterized by cordgrass, spike grass, and black grass. These marshes
are known well for supporting species that require saline conditions. The tiger
beetle is known to only be found in Nebraska, but is it possible to set up
critical habitats in other locations to help save the species?
Jonathan Sege
Boston
College
Major: Environmental
Geoscience/English
Graduation Date: Spring 2009
Email: segej@mail.bc.edu
Research
Project: The process of community
development is profoundly fundamental and alarmingly fragile. Whatever the
terms in which we choose to assess a communityÕs vitality, the effectiveness of
a population ultimately depends upon its successful interaction with the land
it inhabits. This community-land relationship rarely develops in isolation from
external factors, and can be subject to influences that are shockingly distant
both temporally and spatially. In perhaps few places is this complex
interdependence more starkly apparent than in the small nations of Central
America, and particularly in Nicaragua. There, a history of political and
ecological upheaval and the resultant population migrations have yielded urban
centers burdened with displaced and extremely impoverished residents. My
project will be carried out in the capitol city of Managua. In order to address
the complexities of community development in this environment, my project will
isolate a particular resource – water – and analyze its
implications for development, its current condition, and the history of its
use, in detail.
Margo Ward
Wentworth Institute of
Technology
Major: Environmental Sciences
Graduation Date: Spring 2010
Email: wardm@wit.edu
Research
Project: Within the next decade, the US
Army Corps of Engineers will perform a major infrastructure project in the
heart of BostonÕs Fenway neighborhood. The project will include daylighting a
portion of the Muddy River, dredging and re-engineering the channel for a
portion of the river, and performing significant road improvements. There are
several questions regarding the effect of restoration plans of the Muddy River
in BostonÕs Fenway district that will be addressed in this research project.
This urban waterway, whose reengineering was once designed by Frederick Law
Olmsted to improve tidal drainage and create attractive parkland to the area,
has been repeatedly altered in the past century to meet the needs of a changing
Boston. The Army Corps undertaking is a multi-year, multi-million dollar
project that will have both short-term and long-term impacts to environmental
quality, local transportation,
park access and business,
hospital and community interests in the Fenway. Our project will study the
environmental impacts of the planned renovation project, put them in
perspective to previous major public works that have affected the park, and
assess the relative effect of this project to local residents in the nearby
communities of the Fenway.