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Vax to Flax 2018

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Many thanks to those who participated and assisted with the 2018 Flax to Vax Race + BBQ on Saturday April 28th! The overall winner was student Tim Curtin with a time of 26:13. The faculty winner was Chris Gobler with a time of 26:24. The faculty “won” the race by 3 seconds with a top 5 averaged time of 29:07, the student top 5 averaged time was 29:10.

With the help of the SoMAS community, the Graduate Student Club accepted donations for the Flax to Vax Fund Race which go towards replenishing the Okubo Scholar fund. Mary Scranton, representing Challenger Hall, beat out Mike Frisk by a slim margin of $4 to become the winner of the fund race! Thanks to Jackie CollierMark Lang, Michael French, Mary Scranton, Brad Peterson and Mike Frisk for agreeing to participate in the fund race and to everyone who made donations!

Name Team Time
 Tim Curtin  Student 26:13
Chris Gobler  Faculty 26:24
Heather Lynch  Faculty 26:37
Ben Kramer  Student 29:17
Kurt Bretsch  Faculty 29:25
Mark Wiggins  Faculty 29:57
Wenda Zhang  Student  29:57
Steven Tomasett  Student 30:28
Molly Graffam  Student 31:29
Justin Bopp  Student 31:50
Melanie Wolfe Pitt  Outside 32:03
Mark Maa  Student 33:02
Matt Fuirst  Student 33:36
Joe Warren  Faculty 34:14
Ollie Shipley  Student 34:45
Karin Schweitzer  Student 36:00
Hang Yin  Student 27:21
Leia Reidenbach  Student 37:17
Bob Aller  Faculty 37:32
Jiwen Zhu  Student 38:48
Julia Stepanuk  Student 39:26
Abby Tyrell  Student 40:34
Xiao Hui Liu  Faculty 40:53
Alyssa Stansfield  Student 42:21
Liz Najman  Student 42:24
Lequan Chi Student  44:32
Yicheng Huang Student 45:07
Tara Dolan Student 49:27
Ari Vanudo-Clarke Student 58:25
Ben Adkins Student 58:27
Student Time 29.17
Faculty Time 29.12

Pictures by Kurt Bretsch, Teresa Schwemmer and Mark Lang


MBA Students Present Final Project on Waste Ash Management

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Masters of Business Administration students Andrew Sheets, Courtney Murphy, Paul Edwards and Ying Cui from the Stony Brook University College of Business presented their final research project on the economics of ash management for the Town of Babylon today at the Stony Brook University School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences. The students were advised by School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences faculty Frank Roethel. The Town uses an incinerator to burn their garbage, which in turn creates a significant amount of ash.

Their project was to find a solution for the quickly filling ash monofill in the Town of Babylon. If the monofill closes, the Town would have to ship the ash off Long Island, at significant cost. The students found that processing the ash and recovering metals for recycling would bring in a significant amount of money and using the leftover ash as “aggregate substitute for asphalt and cement would be extremely cheaper and save local businesses and town residents money.”

Representatives from the Town of Babylon and various waste management groups were at SoMAS for the presentation, which was well-received.  The students will be graded by their instructor with the advisement of Dr. Roethel.

The Town of Babylon is reportedly exploring the options suggested by the students. This project is a great example of cross-discipline project where School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences is involved.  Undergraduate students can apply for a 5-year fast track MBA through the College of Business.

A full photo album is available on Google Photos.  Many thanks to Kaitlin Willig for the photos.

 

Sustainability Studies Student Edward Gallagher ‘18 Kickstarts New Composting Research for a More Sustainable Future

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From Edward Gallagher ‘18 Kickstarts New Composting Research for a More Sustainable Future on SBU Happenings on May 10, 2018

Empowered by his position as a sustainability intern for the Faculty Student Association (FSA), Edward Gallagher ’18 has worked to develop a more efficient, sustainable method to compost food waste at campus dining locations.

While FSA currently composts “pre-consumer” food leftovers that no one has bought or taken, resulting in more than 6,000 lbs. of food waste converted into usable compost this semester, a program to compost leftovers that students couldn’t finish was in need of development — and Gallagher was happy to help.

In his research, Gallagher came across a composting process called Bokashi, a Japanese term for “fermented organic matter.” In Bokashi composting, kitchen scraps of all kinds are mixed with inoculated bran, pressed into a bucket, covered with another handful of bran, and tightly covered. When the bucket is full, it is sealed shut and set aside for 10 to 12 days.

“You’re using a sealed container so you’re not letting air in and you end up not producing any carbon dioxide, gallaghercomposting food waste without making carbon dioxide. Then you can use it as fertilizer,” Gallagher explains.

As a FSA sustainability intern, Edward’s research on food waste has been supported and encouraged by the organization. “FSA has been instrumental in getting my foot in the door, providing funding for the project so I don’t have to pay for the materials, and they’ve given me a greenlight to sort of mold what I want to do to the system that we have in place,” Edward said.

Gallagher chose the Sustainability Studies major after sampling a variety of programs, such as computer engineering and applied math and sciences, but realized that his passion was for finding ways to help the environment.

He became concerned about environmental waste during a family trip to the Bahamas in 2011.  “When we got there, there was half the island, the inhabited part, where all the partying was and everyone was having a good time, and then there was the part that didn’t have any people, so there was this long stretch of beach just covered in trash,” Gallagher explained. “I was kinda like wow, that’s terrible, so me, my mom and my sister actually went over there and started picking up plastic off the beaches.”

Gallagher is hopeful for Stony Brook to be an example for other universities in processing food waste. “We can find ways to reduce our food waste that we ship out to Brookhaven, we can reduce our methane footprint, and hopefully act as a model for other schools to combat unsustainable practices that lead to climate change,” he said.

 

Highlights From Our Recent Graduates

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This Friday, the School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences will celebrate our graduating students at Convocation, where 101 undergraduate and 36 graduate students will have their degrees conferred.  Profiles for a few of our graduating students are highlighted below.

Congratulations to our graduates and best of luck on your future endeavors!

#seawolvesforlife

Ashley Landrein (second from left in the image on the right) picked the Ecosystems and Human Impact major out of all of the majors at SBU because she liked the idea of solving environmental problems. She wants to get an advanced degree in Evolution or Environmental Science, but she could be a stand-up comic in the way she addresses issues–personal and academic–with the same deadpan analysis. You blink at something she’s just said, and then you either laugh because she’s delivered a killer joke, or you say, “Oh, yeah. I wish I’d have thought of that.”

Ashley conducted her Honor’s research in the Worm Lab because she wanted to know more about how a common herbicide, Roundup, impacted the environment and non-target organisms like earthworms. She knew from a literature review that many ecotoxicologist had studied the impact of glyphosate, the active ingredient of Roundup, on earthworms, but the effect of the Roundup formulations remained unstudied. She thought this was crazy because no one uses glyphosate to kill weeds. They use Roundup formulations. Under her leadership, her group found that Roundup Ready To Use has a stronger environmental impact than Roundup Super Concentrate, and that both formulations were more deadly to earthworms than was glyphosate alone. There are dozens of Roundup formulations out there, all used in different ways. Ashley understands that we need to assess the costs of using these week killers even as we appreciate the benefits.

Shauna Wright completed a double major in Environmental Design, Policy, and Planning and in Coastal Environmental Studies. In the picture on the right, Shauna (center) is with her team in EDP 404: Environmental Design Project presenting their Wopowog Garden proposal to the Faculty Student Association in East Side Dining. She was also a student co-chair of the Earthstock Planning Committee.

This summer she will study coral reef restoration at the Mote Marine Laboratory and Aquarium in Florida.

Yuman Xu (far left in the picture on the right) cares passionately about environmental issues in both China and the United States. With her GPA of 3.8, every door is opened for her, but she has her sights set on an environmental career that requires both hands-on action and intellectual skills. Yuman’s public speaking skills are second-to-none, and she raises the academic bar for students who collaborate with her on any project. As a member of the Worm Lab, she studied the impact of artificial turf on earthworms, looking specifically for damaged mitochondrial DNA. She’ll make a great asset for any scientific consulting or environmental group!

Maria Grima is an outstanding Environmental Studies student who has demonstrated that her enthusiasm for a fulfilling life extends beyond the classroom. She embraces making the world a better place through her actions. Most recently, she played a major role in SBU’s Earthstock event, giving the “Green Pledge” to the many participants at the opening ceremony. She also stepped in at the last minute to participate in Earthstock’s “Great Debate,” which required considerable late night studying. She represented her position admirably.

Maria (far right in the picture on the right) was an undergraduate winner of the 2017 Evan R. Liblit Memorial Scholarship, given for outstanding academic accomplishments in the environmental sciences including waste management, for her numerous efforts to promote sustainability and the environment. This is the largest award for an undergraduate in SoMAS and is extremely competitive. Her acceptance speech at the award ceremony was extremely gracious and powerful. The audience was so impressed that one of the engineering consulting firms offered her a job on the spot.

Christina Giordanella completed a double major in Coastal Environmental Studies and Sustainability Studies. Her Honors College project focused on growing algae both to remove excess nutrients from water and to use a source of biodiesel. She founded the Stony Brook University chapter of the Climate Reality Project.

Christina will begin law school in the Fall, but first plans to tour England, Scotland, and Wales with her grandmother this summer.

Growing up on Long Island, Peter Larios has always had a fascination with the ocean. Whether it was fishing, clamming, or SCUBA diving, he knew since he was a child that the water would shape his career path. Now as a graduate of Stony Brook University’s School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences with a degree in Marine Sciences, the journey is just beginning.
This coming June and November he will be participating in the ADEON project with professor Joe Warren, spending three weeks on the continental shelf (150 miles offshore) on the University of Rhode Island’s R/V Endeavor.
For 2 weeks in August he will be participating in a renewable energy capstone project in Iceland as part of the GREEN Program.
And in the spring of 2018 he will be returning to Stony Brook to complete his advanced graduate certificate in geospatial sciences, with his ultimate goal being employment by an environmental consulting company.

When Dr. Sharon Pochron first met Brooke Arena (far right in the image to the right) as her Major Advisor, she remembers her saying how she “wanted to be a conservation biologist more than anything in the world.” Brooke had dyed the tips of her blonde hair green, her backpack was covered with environmental pins and patches, and all she wanted to talk about was animals. She had a high GPA, but when it was suggested that she apply to graduate school, Brooke literally froze. She didn’t think she had it in her to take the chemistry and calculus. But she did. She took those hard classes and aced them.

Brooke conducted an Honor’s thesis in the Earthworm Toxicology Lab, leading a group of students as they tackled an environmental question of civic importance. They wanted to know if people could be eating livestock pharmaceuticals when they ate the peas grown in their back yards. After assessing the contamination pathway (from horses with worms, to medicine, to poop, to compost), Brooke led her team through the rigors of creating potentially contaminated plants and testing them for contamination. The answer does not exist in the literature, but Brooke and her team demonstrated clearly that your garden peas are capable of bioaccumulating pharmaceuticals meant to kill intestinal worms in cows, sheep and horses. When Brooke graduates with her Bachelors in Ecosystems and Human Impact, she’ll be entering the MS program in Ecology and Evolution here at Stony Brook University.

If you’ve attended Earthstock or catch the Stony Brook News, Matthew McDermott should be a familiar face at Stony Brook University. Matthew, an Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences major, is also a member of the Stony Brook Meteorology Club, where this year he serves as Treasurer.  Last year he was the Journalism Coordinator for the club.  He has taken full advantage of the collaborations between SoMAS and the School of Journalism and delivers the weather in the weekly Stony Brook Newscast.  He even suited up in the rain for an in-the-field report on the live broadcast at this year’s Roth Regatta!

But where Matthew may be most recognizable is at Earthstock, where he has helped celebrate Earth Day at Stony Brook University hidden behind the mask of our lobster.  Matthew’s enthusiasm and dancing ability provide a welcoming personality to our lobster, and he has been captured in many photos at Earthstock. His favorite memory as the lobster was “dancing around crazily and of course photobombing everyone’s photos.” And even better is the fact that he “can talk to people through the costume, but a lot of the time, they have no idea it’s me!”

Matthew is currently applying for jobs once he graduates, but he would really like to travel a bit across Europe and in the U.S.  He’s not ruling out graduate school, either.

Abigail Higgins is a Biology major with a minor in Ecosystems and Human Impact from upstate New York.  She has always been interested in the way plants and animals interact with their environment and this has carried over into the research she has been a part of here at Stony Brook. Her interest in research began when she decided to take an Entering Research Workshop offered here at Stony Brook the spring of her sophomore year, and in the fall, she joined Dr. Ivan Chase’s lab.  While being a part of this lab, she has aided in experiments on dominance behaviors in African Cichlid. This past summer, she also took part in an experiment looking at the morphology of local hermit crabs. Last summer, Abigail also joined Dr. Heather Lynch’s lab and has been analyzing at-sea bird distributions in the Southern Ocean with her mentor Michael Schrimpf. This semester Abigail took a class on research in ecotoxicology in Dr. Sharon Pochron’s lab. She presented her research project from the Lynch lab and a group project from Dr. Pochron’s lab at the 2018 URECA Symposium.  Outside of performing research, Abigail loves to be outdoors and has been a part of the Stony Brook Sierra Club for the past two years, currently serving as secretary. After graduation, she plans on taking a gap year before attending graduate school to continue to pursue research in ecology. This summer she will be working at Old Westbury Gardens as an Environmental Education Intern.  She was one of 10 students featured as the May 2018 URECA Researchers of the Month.

Ryan Wallace Awarded 2018 Nuria Protopopescu Memorial Teaching Award

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Above: Nuria Protopopescu Memorial Teaching Award Winner Ryan Wallace accepts his award at the SoMAS Convocation from Interim Dean Larry Swanson and Professor Bob Aller.

After consideration of several outstanding nominees, Ryan Wallace has been selected as the recipient of the 2018 Nuria Protopopescu Memorial Teaching Award.  This award is presented annually to a SoMAS graduate student based on demonstrated excellence in teaching, innovation and creativity in instructional plans and materials, and engagement with and dedication to their students.

Ryan has been involved in teaching  throughout his graduate career at SoMAS.  He has taught Marine Biology at Suffolk County Community College in Selden for the past three years, and more recently taken on teaching Introduction to Oceanography at SCCC in Riverhead and Introduction to Environmental Biology at St. Josephs College.  Letters of recommendation noted Ryan’s ability to engage and excite both science and non-science students, and three of his former students are now undergraduates at SoMAS.

In addition to teaching classes, in the past year Ryan has mentored high school students, served as a judge at the WAC Invitational Science Fair, and engaged in outreach at a citizen science coastal acidification monitoring workshop held at UCONN.

The award was presented at the May 18th SoMAS Convocation and includes a certificate, the awardee’s name on a plaque to be permanently displayed at SoMAS, and a check for $1,000.00.

Many thanks to the Award Committee: Bob Aller, Christina Heilbrun, Qingzhi Zhu, and Chair Tom Wilson for their efforts in fundraising and assistance in identifying this year’s award recipient.

Congratulations to Ryan for this recognition and many thanks for his service to the school and community!

SoMAS Convocation 2018

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Congratulations to our graduates!  The annual SoMAS Convocation occurred on Friday, May 18, 2018 at the Student Activities Center auditorium. Students gathered with their friends and family and SoMAS faculty and staff to celebrate the completion of their journey at Stony Brook University.

Interim Dean Larry Swanson provided opening remarks after the processional and Dr. Carl Safina gave the Convocation Address.

Awarding of Undergraduate Certificates

  • B.A. in Environmental Studies – Presented by Dr. Kamazima M.M. Lwiza
    • Joseph Acito, Alexandra Bonecutter, Matthew Gino, Valery Gonzalez, Edward Gorman, Maria Grima*, Sitong Guo, Sahiba Kaur, Jackson Kazdan, Zachary Kruskal, Isabelle Lamarre, Jesse Little, Giovanna Monti, Nicole Pyun, Conor Russell, Daniel Smalls
  • B.S. in Marine Sciences  – Presented by Dr. Kamazima M.M. Lwiza
    • Ashley Bean, Caleb Budd, Michael Cashin, Makenzie Conover, Darren De Silva, Amanda Dias, Ilana Dorsch, Christian Foito, Asdis Griggs, Isabelle Lamarre, Peter Larios, Sarah McTague, Taishi Misumi, Gregory Paul, Jennifer Stahl
  • B.S. in Marine Vertebrate Biology – Presented by Dr. Kamazima M.M. Lwiza
    • Alexa Albam, Anushka Anderson, Jordan Blue, Ariel Calle, Stephanie Flanagan, Shane Gallimore, Shannon Kanidinc, Emily Kollmer, Melissa Leone, Jocelyn Liu, Helena Nierer, Blondelle Quimi, Gabriella Riggio, Vijay Suthar, Michael Thompson, Victoria Uthman, Christopher Wozny
  • B.S. in Coastal Environmental Studies – Presented by Dr. Kate Aubrecht
    • Jade Blennau, Christina Giordanella+, Victoria Inestroza, Min Joo Jeong, Sophie Killy, Mary Mei, Michelle Nevins, Kristen O’Neill, Steven Ragusa, Brittney Scannell, Justin Valles, Electra Vasilopoulos, Shauna Wright
  • B.A. in Ecosystems and Human Impact – Presented by Dr. Kate Aubrecht
    • Brooke Arena, Victoria Inestroza, Minki Kim, Ashley Landrein, Zachary Paiva, Julia Petersen**, Elijah Stowe, Rachel Wanderman, Harrison Watters
  • B.A. in Environmental Design, Policy and Planning – Presented by Dr. Kate Aubrecht
    • Soo Hyun Ahn, Angelica Apolinaris, Bryan Benitez, Stephen Boncimino, Vivian Chokry, Jeffrey Ehrhardt, Michael Iorizzo III, Ji Won Kim, Daniel Panko, Stephen Schiavetta, Amy Su, Shenglin Wang, Shauna Wright, Zhiying Zhao
  • B.A. in Sustainability Studies – Presented by Dr. Kate Aubrecht
    • Kyle Bentley, Stanley Chen, Nicholas Fagone, Edward Gallagher Jr., Christina Giordanella, Nicolle Portilla, Jennie Ryder, Sean Wiedemann, Yuman Xu

+Second place in the SoMAS Undergraduate Environmental Essay Awards
*Recipient of the 2017 Evan R. Liblit Graduate Memorial Scholarship
**Recipient of the 2017 Evan R. Liblit Memorial Scholarship

Stony Brook Alumni Association Dean’s Choice Awards

  • Presented by Dr. Frank Roethel
    • Atmospheric Sciences – Matthew McDermott
    • Environmental Studies – Maria Grima
    • Marine Sciences – Peter Larios
    • Sustainability Studies – Ashley Landrein

Honors Recognized

  • Undergraduate Honors presented by Dr. Larry Swanson, Interim Dean
    • Brooke Arena Can Garden Peas Bioaccumulate a Common Livestock Pharmaceutical? Dr. Sharon Pochron, Advisor
    • Joshua Feldman Examination of Physical Approaches in Forecasting Non-convective Wind Gusts in the New York City Area Dr. Brian A. Colle, Advisor
    • Ashley Landrein Roundup® Formulation Type Impacts Earthworm Health Dr. Sharon Pochron, Advisor
    • Sarah McTague The Use of Hydrogen Peroxide for the Mitigation of Anabaena sp. Strain 90 and Strain 54 Dr. Christopher J. Gobler, Advisor

Awards Timothy Magnussen Memorial Scholarship

  • Justin Bettenhauser
  • Magdalena Wrobel

Petra M. Udelhofen Memorial Scholarship Award Presented by Dr. Brian A. Colle

  • Katherine McKeown

Nuria Protopopescu Memorial Award for Excellence in Teaching Presented by Dr. Robert C. Aller

  • Ryan Wallace

Pikitch Family Endowed Student Research Award Presented by Dr. David Black

  • Elisabeth Henderson

Best Thesis/Dissertation Awards – Presented by Dr. David Black

  • Best Dissertation: Cheng-Shiuan Lee
  • Best Thesis: Joseph Charnawskas

Master of Arts in Marine Conservation and Policy Certificates Presented by Dr. Glenn Lopez

  • Alexa Annunziata, Nicole Carone, Katherine Conroy, Jason Dumond, Christopher Meyer, Kaitlin Morris, Tyler Prichett, Cariann Wood

Master of Science and Doctoral Certificates in Marine and Atmospheric Sciences Presented by Dr. David Black

  • Master of Science in Marine & Atmospheric Sciences
    • Stephanie Adamczak*
      A Comparison of Short- and Long-finned Pilot Whale Thermal Ecology Using External Morphometrics, 3D Modeling, and Dive Behavior
      Dr. Lesley Thorne, Advisor
    • Ryan Connelly
      Predictability of Snow Multi-Bands in the Cyclone Comma Head Using a 40-Member WRF Ensemble
      Dr. Brian A. Colle, Advisor
    • Matthew Fuirst
      A Comparison of Herring Gull Foraging Ecology and Microbiome Along an Urban Gradient
      Dr. Lesley Thorne, Advisor
    • Justin Lashley
      Geomorphology of the Continental Shelf off of Watch Hill, Fire Island National Sea Shore, NY
      Dr. Henry J. Bokuniewicz, Advisor
    • Taylor Mandelbaum
      Development of a Model Climatology Tool to Assess Ensemble Variability and Uncertainty
      Dr. Brian A. Colle, Advisor
    • Emily Markowitz
      Distribution Shifts Associated with Changing Environmental Parameters in Two Demersal Species Summer Flounder (Paralichthys dentatus) and Black Sea Bass (Centropristis striata)
      Dr. Janet Nye, Advisor
    • Sarah Nickford
      Mechanisms Controlling the Summertime Interannual Variability of SST and Chlorophyll-a in the Northwest Atlantic
      Dr. Kamazima M.M. Lwiza, Advisor
    • Kaitlyn O’Toole
      Development of a Bio-optical Model for Application Towards Seagrass Restoration within the Peconic Bay Estuary (Long Island, NY)
      Dr. Bradley J. Peterson, Advisor
    • Zoe Smith
      Assessing Potentially Toxic Metals in Nitrogen Removing Biofilters
      Dr. Roy Price, Advisor
    • Raymond Sukhdeo
      The Interaction Between Arctic Sea Ice Decline and Atmospheric Blocking and its Relation to Temperature in the United States
      Dr. Ping Liu, Advisor
    • Arianna Varuolo-Clarke
      Topographic Influences On the North American Monsoon
      Dr. Kevin A. Reed, Advisor
    • Colin Wirth
      Passive Acoustic Monitoring of Marine Habitats
      Dr. Joseph D. Warren, Advisor

*Recipient of the 2017 Jerry R. Schubel Fellowship Award

  • Doctor of Philosophy in Marine & Atmospheric Sciences
    • Isaac Klingensmith
      Interactions of Mangroves and the Silicon Cycle in Coastal French Guiana
      Dr. Robert C. Aller, Advisor
    • Rebecca Kulp***
      Investigating the Effect of Habitat Type on Foraging Efficiency
      Dr. Bradley J. Peterson, Advisor
    • Albert Yau
      Documenting and Understanding Changes and Variability of Storm Tracks Under Global Warming
      Dr. Edmund K.M. Chang, Advisor
    • Wei Zhang
      Studies of the Influences of Aerosol on Boundary Layer Clouds Using Large-eddy Simulations
      Dr. Marat Khairoutdinov, Advisor
    • Xin Zhou
      Changes in Temperature and Precipitation Extremes in a Warmer Climate
      Dr. Marat Khairoutdinov, Advisor

***Recipient of the 2016 Jerry R. Schubel Fellowship Award

Minor in Environmental Studies

Alexa Albam, Alexandra Rivera, Vijay Suthar

Minor in Marine Sciences

Alexandra Bonecutter, Joseph Carbone, Tyler Corsello, Maria Grima, Min Joo Jeong, Shayla Nickles, Sheng Wang

Minor in Coastal Environmental Studies

Ariel Calle, Stephanie Flanagan, Eunice Wang

Minor in Ecosystems and Human Impact

Kyle Bentley, Darren De Silva, Amritjot Dhillon, Abigail Higgins, Sajjad Hussaini, Ashley Kappenmacher, Michael Moawad, Jacqueline Nikakis, Andrea Persaud, Yuman Xu

Minor in Environmental Design, Policy and Planning

Matthew Behar, Constantine Bournias, Peter Larios, Amanda Protopapas, Elijah Stowe

Minor in Environmental Humanities

Ricki Liu

Minor in Sustainability Studies

Imran Azad, Taylor Costello, Humira Ferdush, Matthew Fuchs, Allison Henry, Ricki Liu, Sean Lotz, Keiko Nagami, James Nevins, Pooja Pandya, Amanda Protopapas, Amanda Rooney

Minor in Geospatial Science

Michael Cashin, Kyle Castillo, Maria Grima, Sophie Killy, Sarah McTague, Helena Nierer

Photos of the Event by Kurt Bretsch are available on Google Photos

Photos of the Graduating Students are available on Google Photos

Many thanks to everyone involved in the event including Ginny Clancy, Christina Fink, Christina Ozelis, Diane Vigliotta, Tom Wilson, Kurt Bretsch, Steve Ortega, Mark Wiggins, Kim Knoll, and Eileen Doyle.

Hirschberg and Quigley Retirement Party

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On May 15th, SoMAS celebrated the retirement of Analytical Lab technician David Hirschberg and Sustainability Studies faculty Jim Quigley.

David Hirschberg has been a part of SoMAS for 25 years, starting in the graduate program where he received his Masters in 1979. David has done work with some rather unique instruments over the years and will be hard to replace.

Jim Quigley who joined the Sustainability Studies Program in 2007. He has a Ph.D. in City and Regional planning and prior to coming to SBU worked as a researcher, educator, and administrator focused on issues of waste disposal, renewable energy, energy conservation, and environmental policy. He has been the faculty director for the Environmental Design, Planning, and Policy (EDP) major since its inception. Jim has taught many courses for the EDP and the Sustainability Studies Program. Students and faculty appreciate his outgoing personality and his strong sense of mission.

Both will be greatly missed!  Thank you for your years of service!

Pictures from the event taken by Malcolm Bowman are available on Google Photos

Culmination of Another Exciting Year

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It has been an honor to serve as the interim dean of SoMAS for the past few years. SoMAS is truly a remarkable institution with a great history and a bright future.

While facing formidable University-wide budgetary challenges, we are nonetheless in a very strong position moving forward. Our research portfolio is robust and relevant to ongoing marine, atmospheric, and sustainability issues. We must remain committed to our fundamental mission of being the marine and atmospheric sciences program for the SUNY system, the state, and the region. Our diverse research efforts in climate change, severe weather, coastal resilience, marine pollution, clean water, and marine animal diseases are but a few examples of where we are making significant environmental impacts and for which we should be proud.

However, research is only the beginning. We must turn our scientific findings into beneficial societal outcomes through policy and implementation of ideas. To that end, we have helped ban DDT and initiated one of the most formidable environmental NGOs in the world. Our faculty helped identify the ozone hole, eventually contributing to its significant amelioration. We contributed to ending ocean dumping worldwide and have created beneficial products from waste materials. Large sewage outfalls are being relocated and hypoxia is being reduced in Long Island Sound. Our staff have invented equipment used worldwide by oceanic institutions to ensure clean data collection from bubble-sensitive instruments. We have developed techniques to synthesize information from a large ensemble of forecast models to improve predictions of extreme weather, and have enhanced seasonal and sub-seasonal weather forecasts. Our research on forage fish has influenced global standards for their management and policy changes in the U. S.

Our educational programs are producing excellent students who in many cases are finding relevant, fascinating jobs in their fields. The Sustainability Studies program has added diversity to our undergraduate environmental, marine and atmospheric science education and as a result we are thinking a little differently today.

And, SoMAS has an outstanding faculty and staff, truly devoted to promoting the work and values of our institution. We have every reason to be extremely optimistic about our future and our ability to meet the environmental challenges of our times.

Have a wonderful, enjoyable summer.

Larry


Reservation for two species—fisherman and dolphins are grabbing a bite at the same NY artificial reef

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Above: This underwater microphone heard people and dolphins using an artificial reef in New York to find fish to eat. Credit: Stony Brook University

From “Reservation for two species—fisherman and dolphins are grabbing a bite at the same NY artificial reef” on Phys.org.

There’s plenty of fish in the sea for human fisherman and bottlenose dolphins to feast on and now, according to a study by researchers at Stony Brook University published in Marine Mammal Science , both species are using a New York artificial reef at the same time to find fish to eat – a new finding.

Using an underwater microphone deployed at 55 feet on an artificial reef three miles south of Atlantic Beach on Long Island, researchers were able to observe the sounds made by both species to determine eating habits and timing. Stony Brook graduate student in the School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences and lead author, Colin Wirth, listened to recordings from a six-day period in June 2015 and identified sounds from human activity (recreational boat engine noise), bottlenose dolphins and noise-making fish (weakfish, oyster toadfish.)

“Dolphins make lots of very different sounds – whistles to communicate, clicks to find fish and even one that sounds like a gun going off. Boat noises are very distinct, you can hear the engines go in and of gear, so you can tell when boats are drifting at idle or are moving back and forth over the reef. It’s interesting to think about how we used the sounds to identify what fish were present and wonder if the dolphins are doing the same thing,” said Wirth.

The underwater microphone also captured sounds from animals that were not seen visually during numerous visits to the reef. “With the planned expansion of the NY artificial reef program by New York State, there are numerous opportunities to extend this work to multiple locations and new sites to further study how humans and dolphins (as well as other species) are sharing these habitats,” said Joe Warren, Associate Professor at Stony Brook University’s School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences, Wirth’s advisor and co-author of the study.

Above: Co-author Dr. Joseph Warren recovers the underwater microphone that was deployed on a New York artificial reef to study how humans and dolphins use the reef as a food source. Credit: Stony Brook University.

Multiple artificial reefs have been constructed by New York State and are designed to attract fish and provide a productive location for recreational fisherman to use.

Sound Check

According to researchers, boat noises began to rise in the early morning before tapering off in the mid-afternoon and were louder on weekends than on weekdays. While dolphin noises were heard regularly at the reef both day and night. During the loudest times of the study (weekend mornings) there were periods where no dolphin noises were heard. “During 100s of miles of boat surveys and dozens of SCUBA dives at the artificial reef sites, none of us ever saw a dolphin, so I was completely surprised when Colin told me that he was hearing them regularly in the recordings. Using an underwater microphone provided us a unique view of what animals (including humans) are doing at these sites,” said Prof. Warren.

This research was partially supported by funding from the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation.

Explore further: The fishy problem of underwater noise pollution

More information: Colin Wirth et al. Overlapping use of an artificial reef by humans and an apex predator (Tursiops truncatus ) in the New York Bight, Marine Mammal Science (2018). DOI: 10.1111/mms.12515

SoMAS Faculty Secure $1.1 Million for NY Sea Grant Research Projects

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Photo Above: According to Gobler, 2017 was one of the worst years for brown tide and red tides that cause paralytical shellfish poisoning. It covered the entire south shore of Long Island by early June and persisted through late July in Great South Bay, pictured here. Credit: Auxiliary Coast Guard

From $1.1 Million Secured for New York Sea Grant Research Projects on SBU Happenings, May 31, 2018

Five new two-year coastal research projects are now underway and all are being administered at Stony Brook University. Two of the projects are being led by Christopher Gobler, Endowed Chair of Coastal Ecology and Conservation, and Associate Professor Bradley Peterson from the School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences at Stony Brook. The projects — funded with a total amount awarded of more than $1.1 million — are sponsored by New York Sea Grant (NYSG) and funded through the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Sea Grant’s federal parent agency.

“These new projects target issues of importance to New Yorkers and to citizens everywhere,” said William Wise, director of New York Sea Grant. “Our approach of linked research, outreach, and extension raises awareness about coastal resources and enhances the sustainability of coastal communities.”

Gobler’s research aims to better understand nutrients in sediment and their connection to harmful algal blooms (HABs). He will host workshops on HABs and water quality in Long Island estuaries and study concentrations and exchanges of nitrogen (a growth nutrient for various algal blooms) between estuarine sediments and the overlying waters. HABs degrade water quality and can lead to hypoxia (oxygen-depleted waters), acidification (a process by which absorption of carbon dioxide gas produces a pH imbalance in these waters, making them more acidic), fish kills, and decline in valuable bivalve species (oysters, clams, mussels, scallops).

A scallop shell washed ashore in Long Island’s Noyac Bay. These and other aquatic filter feeders face survival challenges in bays, estuaries and other waters due to a number of water quality issues that Bradley Peterson will study. Credit: Paul C. Focazio

“Many of New York’s estuaries already face seasonal acidification and hypoxia,” said Gobler. “These conditions will intensify with near-term climate change.” As confirmed in related studies, Gobler added, “It is important that regions and species of bivalves least susceptible to these conditions be identified now in order to maximize the resilience of New York’s bivalve populations and seafood supply for the future.”

Peterson’s project will explore connections between seagrasses and ocean acidified waters. He will assess the ability of seagrass to draw down carbon dioxide from the water, which could reduce the effects of ocean acidification. Peterson’s team will also determine if seagrass-modified water benefits adjacent habitats. Seagrasses could provide refugia — areas of more favorable conditions for calcified organisms such as corals and crustaceans —from the surrounding acidified waters. As such, the ecosystem services provided by seagrass could reduce the negative impacts of ocean acidification.

The other three projects focus on better aquatic invasive species detection, flood risk, and a pervasive microbic food-borne pathogen.

Read more about these projects

Learn more about Sea Grant

Old Inlet Breach Flyover 2018-05-25

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Dr. Charles Flagg took another flight over the Breach at Old Inlet on Fire Island on May 25, 2018.  The flyover mosaic is available below.  A report on the status of the breach from Dr. Flagg is pending.

Mark Lang has assembled all the geo-referenced photo mosaics into a kml file that can be viewed using Google Earth.  By clicking between images and using the fade in-out button you can clearly see how the inlet is changing with time.  An offline version of the KML file is available as KMZ. The full size image is also available.

For more information, please visit Dr. Charles Flagg’s website.

Artificial Reef Creation off Shinnecock Inlet

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On May 31st, 2018, SoMAS faculty Chris Gobler, Joe Warren, Brad Peterson, Mike Frisk and Interim Dean Larry Swanson joined New York Governor Andrew Cuomo at the first phase of the “largest artificial reef expansion in New York state history.”  The Shinnecock reef uses “recycled materials from the former Tappan Zee Bridge, as well as former Canal vessels” and is aimed to ” improve New York’s diverse marine life and boost Long Island’s recreational, and sport fishing and diving industries.”

The complete photo album is available on Google Photos.  Photos provided by Larry Swanson and Chris Gobler.

Videos from the event are available on YouTube, but are included below.

Governor’s Announcement

Cruise to Reef

Aerial video of Reef Deployment

 

SoMAS Photo Competition 2018

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The SoMAS photo competition is an annual event where students (graduate and undergraduate), faculty and staff share their pictures with the SoMAS community and the general public.

The Photo Competition will be divided into three categories with a single winner in each category:

1- Macro: It’s all about the detail! Photos taken with the macro option-objective of the camera as well as microscope pictures will be accepted in this category.

2- Research: Pictures taken in the field or in the laboratory will be considered in this category. For a picture to be eligible the research related to it had to take place while being a SoMAS’ member (enrolled in the school or employed as staff).

3- SoMAS spirit: Freestyle photos. Anything that embodies the spirit of SoMAS will be eligible under this category. It can include photos of SoMAS events, SoMAS personnel, campus/equipment…your choice!

The results of the SoMAS Photo Competition are in!  Event organizer and SoMAS PhD Student Sara Cernadas-Martin announced the finalists and the winners for this year’s contest!

Macro winner: Kaitlyn O’Toole

Macro finalist: Alexander Koutavas, Kaitlyn O’Toole, Julia Saviano, Tess Stundis and Victoria Uthman

All Macro photos are available on Google Photos.

Research winner: Kaitlyn O’Toole

Research finalist: Matthew Fuirst, Matt Siskey (2 photos), Kaitlyn O’Toole and Jackie Avignone

All Research photos are available on Google Photos.

Spirit winner: Karin Schweitzer

Spirit finalists: Karin Schweitzer (2 photos), Hanne Tracy, Kristofer Tuftedal and Maria Amella

All Spirit photos are available on Google Photos.

Congratulations to our finalists and winners and big thank you to everyone who participated in this year’s edition of the SoMAS Photo Competition!  Many thanks to judges Gordon Taylor, Larry Swanson, Brad Peterson and Carl Safina!

The winning photos of each category will be printed in canvas and permanently exhibited at SoMAS! The category winners will receive a $100.00 cash prize!

 

Time to start taking photos and getting ready for next year’s contest!

eDNA Analysis: A key to Uncovering Rare Marine Species

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A pod of killer whales, an endangered species, swims near Seattle. By using eDNA from seawater samples, marine biologists can often detect rare species like the killer whale without seeing them. (Credit: C. Emmons, NOAA Fisheries)

From eDNA Analysis: A key to Uncovering Rare Marine Species by Greg Filiano at the Stony Brook Newsroom, June 14, 2018

STONY BROOK, N.Y., June 14, 2018  — The days of searching the oceans around the world to find and study rare and endangered marine animals are not over. However, an emerging tool that can be used with just a sample of seawater may help scientists learn more about rare marine life than ever before. According to Ellen Pikitch, PhD, of Stony Brook University’s School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences (SoMAS), this 21st Century tool that holds such promise is eDNA analysis. Her explanation was published in a perspectives piece on June 15 in Science.

In the ocean, eDNA can be obtained from seawater that contains sloughed skin cells, scales, secretions and other matter from marine organisms. The method has been shown to reliably and non-invasively detect rare, elusive and difficult-to-study species such as threatened whales, sharks and dolphins.

In the Science perspectives piece, Professor Pikitch explains how eDNA is being used to detect species presence and quantify the abundance of species. She compares the method head on with other techniques that are being used to study rare marine species, many of which are less sensitive, more labor-intensive, involve capture of animals and destruction of their habitat.

Professor Pikitch says that “eDNA outperforms traditional research methods used to study marine species in many respects. Given its advantages, eDNA is likely to quickly become the method of choice for detecting rare and elusive marine species.”

In addition, eDNA methodology is improving rapidly and becoming more cost-effective.

“Both as a complement to prevailing methods and on its own merits, eDNA holds great promise for accelerating our understanding of ocean life,” she concludes.

Pikitch, E. K. (2018). A tool for finding rare marine species. Science, 360(6394), 1180 LP-1182.

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About Stony Brook University
Stony Brook University is going beyond the expectations of what today’s public universities can accomplish. Since its founding in 1957, this young university has grown to become a flagship as one of only four University Center campuses in the State University of New York (SUNY) system with more than 26,000 students and 2,600 faculty members, and 18 NCAA Division I athletic programs. Our faculty have earned numerous prestigious awards, including the Nobel Prize, Pulitzer Prize, Indianapolis Prize for animal conservation, Abel Prize and the inaugural Breakthrough Prize in Mathematics. The University offers students an elite education with an outstanding return on investment: U.S. News & World Report ranks Stony Brook among the top 50 public universities in the nation. Its membership in the Association of American Universities (AAU) places Stony Brook among the top 62 research institutions in North America. As part of the management team of Brookhaven National Laboratory, the University joins a prestigious group of universities that have a role in running federal R&D labs. Stony Brook University is a driving force in the region’s economy, generating nearly 60,000 jobs and an annual economic impact of more than $4.6 billion. Our state, country and world demand ambitious ideas, imaginative solutions and exceptional leadership to forge a better future for all. The students, alumni, researchers and faculty of Stony Brook University are prepared to meet this challenge.

 

Celebrating SoMAS Dean Larry Swanson

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The School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences, along with guests (and SoMAS Alums) from the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, were joined by Stony Brook University Provost Michael Bernstein to celebrate Dean Larry Swanson, whose two-year term as Dean ends today.

Photos of the event taken by Tom Wilson and Malcolm Bowman are available on Google Photos.


Old Inlet Breach Flyover 2018-07-13

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Dr. Charles Flagg took another flight over the Breach at Old Inlet on Fire Island on July 13th, 2018.  The flyover mosaic is available below.

Mark Lang has assembled all the geo-referenced photo mosaics into a kml file that can be viewed using Google Earth.  By clicking between images and using the fade in-out button you can clearly see how the inlet is changing with time.  An offline version of the KML file is available as KMZ. The full size image is also available.

For more information, please visit Dr. Charles Flagg’s website.

Two SoMAS Faculty and Staff honored with SUNY Chancellor’s Awards for Excellence

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From 14 SBU Faculty and Staff Honored with SUNY Chancellor’s Awards for Excellence on SBU Happenings, June 20, 2018

Fourteen of Stony Brook University’s esteemed faculty and staff have received the 2017-2018 State University of New York Chancellor’s Awards for Excellence. A total of 332 faculty and staff from across the SUNY system received awards this year.

“Excellence is SUNY’s hallmark,” said State University of New York Chancellor Kristina M. Johnson. “At each of our campuses it is driven by our faculty and staff and their commitment to providing the highest quality environment, where students are inspired and supported to excel as they pursue their passions. I congratulate this year’s recipients, and thank them for their contributions.”

The Chancellor’s Awards for Excellence are presented annually to faculty and staff in seven categories: Faculty Service, Librarianship, Professional Service, Scholarship and Creative Activities, Teaching, Adjunct in Teaching, and Classified Service. The honor provides system-wide recognition for consistently superior professional achievement and encourages the ongoing pursuit of excellence.

The following are the award recipients from Stony Brook:

Facilities Manager Mark Wiggins

Facilities Manager Mark Wiggins

Excellence in Faculty Service
Joanne Davila, Professor, Department of Psychology

Excellence in Librarianship
Darren Chase, Associate Librarian, Head of Scholarly Communication
Jennifer DeVito, Assistant Librarian, Head of Access Services

Excellence in Professional Service
Nikki Barnett, Assistant Director of Alumni Career Services, Career Center
Lois H. Carter, Assistant Dean for Faculty Affairs, College of Arts and Sciences
Kathy Germana, Assistant to the Chair, Department of Computer Science
Charles Robbins, Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education, Dean of Undergraduate Colleges
Mark Wiggins, Building Manager, School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences

Excellence in Scholarship and Creative Activities
Abhay Deshpande, Professor, Department of Physics and Astronomy
Dimitris Samaras, Associate Professor, Department of Computer Science
Stanislaus Wong, Professor, Department of Chemistry

Lecturer Sharon Pochron

Lecturer Sharon Pochron

Excellence in Teaching
Sharon Pochron, Lecturer, School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences

Excellence in Adjunct in Teaching
Catherine Cammarata, Department of Theatre Arts
Nancee Moes, Department of Theatre Arts

SoMAS Waste Reduction and Management Institute promoting “Strawless Suffolk” Initiative

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Photo above by Kimberly Williams

From Stony Brook to Participate in “Strawless Suffolk” Initiative on SBU Happenings on July 18, 2018

The School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences (SoMAS) will take a lead role as Stony Brook joins a new, county-wide initiative called “Strawless Suffolk.”

This initiative is the first product of the newly formed Suffolk County Single-Use Plastic Reduction Task Force, led by Suffolk County Legislator Kara Hahn and made up of representatives from Suffolk County, Stony Brook University, Suffolk County Community College, the Safina Center, Surfrider Foundation, and Green Inside and Out. Kaitlin Willig (MS ’17) is the SoMAS representative and vice-chair of the task force.

The task force is calling for restaurants to voluntarily participate in “Strawless Suffolk” by pledging to stop providing single-use plastic straws in an effort to reduce marine plastic pollution. Restaurants can participate by going completely strawless, providing biodegradable straws (e.g. paper, bamboo, etc.) upon request, or by providing reusable straws (e.g. glass, stainless steel, etc.).

Plastic straws are the fifth largest contributor of marine plastics and account for approximately 7.5% of the total macro-plastic pollution in the oceans. The task force hopes to sign up 100 restaurants for “Strawless Suffolk” by Labor Day. Also attending a July 2 press conference announcing the initiative were Kimberly Williams, a current science teacher in the Smithtown School District and SoMAS alum, and Robert DiGiovanni, founder and chief scientist at Atlantic Marine Conservation Society and a former lecturer at SoMAS.

Stony Brook University has been involved with remediating marine debris since 1972, when Dr. Ed Carpenter published “Plastics on the Sargasso Sea surface” in Science. In 1989, the Waste Reduction and Management Institute (WRMI) at SoMAS was formed and has since been dedicated to dealing with the issues of marine debris and marine pollution. Kaitlin Willig’s participation in the Suffolk County task force is a continuation of WRMI’s mission.

At Stony Brook University, the Strawless movement is making progress as well.

Starbucks recently announced that as of July 9th, 2018, it has begun phasing out plastic straws from its more than 28,000 stores worldwide by 2020.  A specially designed recyclable lid will be used instead of a straw. These new lids are currently available for cold foam beverages at the Stony Brook University Starbucks locations. Paper straws will be available upon request.

This August, Stony Brook University Campus Dining will be moving to corn-based PLA straws that are biodegradable and created from renewable resources.

 

Reference: 5 Gyres, Algalita, Californians Against Waste, Clean Production Action, Plastic Pollution Coalition, Responsible Purchasing Network, Story of Stuff, Surfrider Foundation and UPSTREAM. “Plastics BAN List 2.0.” November 2017

Additional media coverage provided by:  WSHUCBS New YorkPatch.comTimes-Beacon RecordFIOS 1Long Island Business News

Straws collected during a beach cleanup by SoMAS alum Kimberly Williams
Straws collected during a beach cleanup by SoMAS alum Kimberly Williams
Marine Debris (Photo by Larry Swanson)
Strawless lid from Starbucks

News12 Coverage: Short Clip and Long Clip or on YouTube

Scientists Explore New Experimental Model Systems to Advance Biology

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Photo above: Marine protists known as thraustochytrids produce carotenoids, which are responsible for giving them a yellow to orange color. Carotenoids are essential nutrients for animals, and of biotechnological interest for several applications. EMS scientists are using genetic tools to test whether a novel thraustochytrid gene is involved in carotenoid biosynthesis. What results from the genetic manipulation is the white colonies on these plates – a possible indication of the phenotype of carotenoid-less thraustochytrids that results when the novel gene is inactivated. 

STONY BROOK, NY, July 19, 2018 – Tremendous advancement of basic biological knowledge has come from genetically manipulating model organisms to test mechanistic hypotheses. But the selection of traditional model organisms available offers a limited view of biological diversity, meaning that they cannot be used to investigate a broad swath of novel and important processes. Now an international team of scientists including Jackie Collier, PhD, an Associate Professor in the School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences (SoMAS) at Stony Brook University, is investigating how to genetically manipulate a variety of marine protists –unicellular microscopic organisms that are not classified as a plant, animal or fungus – to develop new experimental models that may help to advance scientific understanding not only in oceanography but in other areas of the biological sciences.

The initiative, launched in 2015 is called the Experimental Model Systems (EMS) Program. A paper describing the diversity and implications of these new model systems, and the unusual collaborative approach of the EMS program, is now published in PLOS Biology.

“Our group created new tools to genetically manipulate a variety of marine protists,” said Collier. “These protists comprise a very diverse group of single-cell eukaryotes that are major components of marine ecosystems and food webs – including the phytoplankton that perform about half of the photosynthesis in the oceans and cause problems in coastal systems such as harmful algal blooms like brown tide – and because of this we may be able to discover new insights into basic biology with broad ecological implications.”

According to the authors, the “EMS program has ignited new drive, progress, and resources to overcome what many in the field of marine prostisology, ecology, and oceanography have recognized as a significant obstacle to understanding these complex and important biological systems.”

The EMS Program is part of the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation’s Marine Microbiology Initiative. Collier’s research at SoMAS is supported by the Foundation.

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About Stony Brook University 
Stony Brook University is going beyond the expectations of what today’s public universities can accomplish. Since its founding in 1957, this young university has grown to become a flagship as one of only four University Center campuses in the State University of New York (SUNY) system with more than 26,000 students and 2,600 faculty members, and 18 NCAA Division I athletic programs. Our faculty have earned numerous prestigious awards, including the Nobel Prize, Pulitzer Prize, Indianapolis Prize for animal conservation, Abel Prize and the inaugural Breakthrough Prize in Mathematics. The University offers students an elite education with an outstanding return on investment: U.S. News & World Report ranks Stony Brook among the top 50 public universities in the nation. Its membership in the Association of American Universities (AAU) places Stony Brook among the top 62 research institutions in North America. As part of the management team of Brookhaven National Laboratory, the University joins a prestigious group of universities that have a role in running federal R&D labs. Stony Brook University is a driving force in the region’s economy, generating nearly 60,000 jobs and an annual economic impact of more than $4.6 billion. Our state, country and world demand ambitious ideas, imaginative solutions and exceptional leadership to forge a better future for all. The students, alumni, researchers and faculty of Stony Brook University are prepared to meet this challenge.

The School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences (SoMAS) is SUNY’s designated school for marine and atmospheric research, education and public service. SoMAS is one of the leading coastal oceanography institutions in the world and features classrooms on the water. The School is also the focus for the study of atmospheric sciences and meteorology and includes the Institute for Terrestrial and Planetary Atmospheres, Institute for Ocean Conservation Science, Institute for Particle-Related Environmental Processes, Living Marine Resources Institute, Waste Reduction and Management Institute and Long Island Groundwater Research Institute.

Stony Brook University Newsroom Press Release

 

SoMAS Study Shows Threatened Sharks Still Common in Fin Trade

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Photo above: These are randomly selected shark fin scraps derived from fin processing being prepared for DNA testing in the laboratory. This step is essential in order to determine if the fin parts are CITES listed endangered species. Credit Diego Cardeñosa

From Study Shows Threatened Sharks Still Common in Fin Trade on SBU Happenings on July 24, 2018

As millions of viewers watch the Discovery channel’s Shark Week 2018, two Stony Brook researchers are among a team that is determined to protect endangered shark species.

A study published in Conservation Letters by lead author Diego Cardeñosa, a Stony Brook University PhD student, reveals that several threatened shark species are still common in the fin trade after being listed on the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES). “CITES‐listed Sharks Remain Among the Top Species in the Contemporary Fin Trade” is the first assessment of the species composition of the fin trade after CITES regulations were put in place for commercially important shark species.

Since September 2014, CITES has regulated scalloped hammerheads, smooth hammerheads, great hammerheads, oceanic whitetips, and porbeagle sharks, some of the world’s most vulnerable and highly traded shark species. This means that permits are required to ship their products from country to country.

From February 2014 to December 2016, a collaborative research team from the U.S. and Hong Kong surveyed small scraps that are produced when imported fins are processed — when the skin, meat and cartilage is trimmed off the fin. Hong Kong is one of the world’s largest importers of shark fins, which are used to make the delicacy, shark fin soup.

The team conducted DNA testing on randomly selected scraps to look for CITES-listed species. They also recorded the incoming weights of fins from these species reported through the CITES Trade Data Base in 2015. According to this database there were only 16 shipments of these species into Hong Kong at a total weight that was less than one half of a percent of the weight of all fins imported that year.

“If this is an accurate reflection of imports, we would expect CITES-listed species would be uncommon among fins being processed in 2015-2016,” said Cardeñosa, a PhD student in the School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences (SoMAS).

“However, our research shows that these species are still commonly being processed at least one year after regulations were implemented,” emphasized Cardeñosa. “In fact, CITES-listed scalloped and smooth hammerheads represented the fourth and fifth most common species found in our survey, out of 82 species and species groups in total.” He also pointed out that because the time lag between import and processing is unknown, it is difficult to determine if some of the fins were imported before the regulations were in place.

“Although we can’t rule out some delayed processing of fins, the disconnect between reported imports and how common these species were in our survey does suggest that major underreporting of CITES imports is occurring,” said Cardenosa. “It also seems unrealistic that many countries that exported fins of these species to Hong Kong suddenly stopped doing so when the regulations came in. But these findings would be consistent with other studies that have shown that compliance with CITES regulations is relatively low during the initial phase of implementation.”

“It is great that there is now a system in place to monitor trade in these threatened shark species,” said Demian Chapman, research team leader from Florida International University. “But listing them is just the first step. Our study highlights that countries fishing, trading, and consuming shark products all have a lot of implementation work to do.”

The team made some practical suggestions on how to improve inspection efficiency so that shark-importing nations like Hong Kong can better meet their obligations to CITES. While Hong Kong has been successful in their implementation efforts — hosting nine CITES workshops for enforcement officials which led to the seizure of 5.1 metric tons of fins from listed species since late 2014 — the research team recommends these additional actions:

  • Scaling up inspection capacity by employing additional inspectors
  • Improving inspection efficiency by centralizing ports of entry for fins and conducting real-time DNA testing in the field
  • Conducting assessments to flag high-risk shipments to prioritize inspections

Cardeñosa is now living and studying in Hong Kong to help authorities develop new approaches to monitoring fin imports for CITES-listed species, including DNA testing of fins directly at the port of entry.

“There is tremendous public support for better management of the shark fin trade in Hong Kong and the government has been willing to work with us and others to control what is coming in more effectively,” said Cardeñosa. “I am hopeful that with cooperation, increased investment, and time, CITES regulations will be fully implemented for these threatened sharks.”

Co-authors of the study include: Andrew Fields of SoMAS; Elizabeth A. Babcock, of the Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science at the University of Miami; Huarong Zhang and Gunter Fischer of the Kadoorie Farm and Botanic Garden in Hong Kong; Kevin Feldheim of the Field Museum, Chicago; Stanley K. H. Shea of the BLOOM Association in Hong Kong; and Demian D. Chapman of Florida International University.

The work was supported by The Pew Charitable Trusts, The Pew Marine Fellows Program and The Roe Foundation.

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