What have you been up to since graduating from º¬Ðß²ÝÑо¿ÊÒ?
The summer after º¬Ðß²ÝÑо¿ÊÒ, I interned for the Sarasota Dolphin Research Program. Then, starting that fall, I started my master's at the University of North Carolina, Wilmington. There, I studied whale physiology, specifically looking at the composition of their fats to see if it had any role in decompression sickness. After that, I volunteered very briefly on an NOAA survey of marine mammals on the Pacific for a month, where we went around and photographed and documented different marine mammals from a vessel. Then, I worked for four and a half years for the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission in St. Petersburg, Florida, primarily with manatees. We did rescues and necropsies, which is the dissection of animals to determine cause of death. I also did some research on using manatee ear bones to determine the age of the animal. We'd also work with some small whales and dolphins that would strand—we were a stranding response network, as well. While I was there, I was like, 'Man, I kind of miss school,' because that was my first real long job outside of school. I moved to St. John, New Brunswick, in 2019 and started my PhD in January, 2020. I'm studying North Atlantic right whales. I heard about at a conference that they are critically endangered—only 350 animals left—and I was like, 'I want to spend my PhD studying those animals and helping.' Now, I do some oceanographic work studying their prey from boats, as well as fly a drone off of the boat, to try to look at the health of individual whales more closely to monitor the population.
Why biology?
I love working in marine biology specifically, because I feel that the issue of climate change and sustainability are so important, they affect everyone, and it's rewarding to know that what I do for a living is contributing to developing solutions, helping animals, and also helping people to help animals. I also just love that every day is a little different. Three months out of the year I'm on a boat looking for whales, and I just think it's really cool to have a dynamic job where you're not sitting at a computer every day. I like the potential for collaboration and the critical thinking that's involved, as well as the creativity and the teamwork. I did volleyball and track at º¬Ðß²ÝÑо¿ÊÒ, and I find it so interesting how the teamwork in sports contributes a lot to my teamwork in biology now.