Sunday, September 24, 2017

A brief introduction to my research


I have now been in southern Mississippi for over a month and I figured it was about time to finally give those who are interested (the brave few who actually choose to read this blog) an update on my research (Note: my plan is to update this blog about once a month). As a recap, last month I started my PhD. program at the University of Southern Mississippi at their research lab (the Gulf Coast Research Lab) in Ocean Spring, MS. The primary research objective of my research is to conduct a Gulf-wide assessment of habitat use and habitat-specific production estimates of nekton in turtlegrass. The above objective may seem a bit of a mouthful, so please allow me to give a better picture of what my research is about. Seagrass (as the name implies) are a group of plants that grows in marine and brackish (salty) environments (Mind blown right?). In addition to be simply being awesome because they are plants growing in highly saline environments (i.e. extremely difficult environments that most plants can't grow in) seagrasses are also incredibly important because they serve as nursery habitats for juvenile nekton (i.e. marine animals that can swim against the current such as crabs and fish) many of which are important for commercial fisheries. One type of seagrass, turtlegrass (Thalassia testudinum) is particularly important in the Gulf of Mexico as it functions as a climax species (look it up) that provides habitat for a wide arrange of animals as well as crucial sediment erosion control (i.e. it holds the sediment together with its rhizomes and roots), and considerable primary productivity (it photosynthesizes and provides lots of surface area on its blades for other things to photosynthesize). Unfortunately, we know from multiple studies worldwide (I can send you dozens of article on the subject if you are interested) that seagrass environments are being severely degraded worldwide which naturally makes us scientists wonder about the effect of this decline on the organisms living in the seagrass habitat. Because many of these organisms, such as blue crab (Callinectes sapidus), are critically important as a food source for much of the US, it is particularly crucial that we develop a better understanding of the nature of the relationships between the nekton and their turtlegrass environments in order to design management and conservation strategies that preserve both the environment and the fisheries for the foreseeable future. Consequently, I am doing research to investigate how nekton are currently using turtle grass as habitat in the Gulf of Mexico.

If you were entirely lost by the long explanation above, do not worry, you are in good company. I too feel lost most of the time in the sheer scope of my project, but I am incredibly excited to see where the research will take me. I will be working with multiple faculty and government employees from multiple states, to conduct field samples, run isotope analysis, collect sediment samples, learn how to ID different fish, and do who knows what else for the next 4-5 years. I will also be doing the academic side of things, taking classes, passing checkpoints (such as quals and comps), writing a dissertation, and defending said dissertation, Is this ridiculous preponderance of work somewhat daunting? Yes, it is but also incredibly exciting to see where God is taking me.

To give those of you who aren't particularly enthralled with long scientific discussions something to actually look at I have put some pictures below of  random happenstances as well as pics of a recent crab tagging trip I went on to help out a labmate with their research. For anyone who is actually interested in more of the details of my research I invite you to take a look at my advisor's website (http://www.kellymdarnell.com/).




Amazing sweet potato pizza that I made

 New pantiers on bike

 View of sunset on Biloxi bay from the Ocean Springs bridge


Some tagged blue crabs

The Mississippi Sound

Sunday, August 27, 2017

The beginning of yet another adventure


     It has been three years since I last updated this blog and so much has occurred since then. When last I took the time to write down my assorted musings about life it was in September of 2014, almost three years ago. At the time I had just finished my summer field work in Honduras and was ramping up to defend my thesis the following semester. Since then, I have: 1. Successfully defended my thesis (Yeah!), 2. Taught at two different colleges (Cedarville University and Judson University), 3. Got to see my older sister Heather married to Justin, an awesome guy from MI, 4. Attended an International Sea Turtle Symposium in Las Vegas, 4. Traveled all over the US, (from Washington to Michigan, as well as Washington to Mississippi), and 5. Joined a great church in IL, and  5. Started a PhD program in Coastal Sciences at the University of Southern Mississippi. My life, (as several of my friends have remarked), is rarely boring. God has truly led me to some incredible places.

     I have considered restarting the blog for some time now, but I didn't have quite the right motivation. Now that I have started my PhD. Program I will no doubt have plenty of material to talk about, as the ups and downs of research are often interesting and occasionally hilarious. Hopefully some of my meandering stories and musings will proof interesting, or if not than at least somewhat amusing. Rather than ramble on anymore I will simply post a few pictures of my trip out here and where I am living, and then get on to the more informative posts about my research later. Enjoy!

                                      
                                               My first car! (2016 Kia Rio I bought in July). 

 Bridge over the Colorado River, Moab

 Wilson Arch, Moab, UT

                                                    Bridge over the Colorado River, Moab


Colorado River, Moab, UT

Me and my dad at a Visitor center in MS

My Dad at the Stennis Space Center Visitor's Center Apollo 11 Replica

 Bently, my housemate's amazing, cute dog

 My room in the house I am renting (You will notice the beautiful bird painting by my Grandpa on the wall)

My amazing durable Ethan Allen desk that came all the way from WA with me. The picture is of one of the first Hawksbill sea turtles I ever saw (Courtesy of Stephen Dunbar).

 My bike (Same $80 dollar Roadmaster I have bought every place I have lived in the last 3 years)