Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Return to the Mothership: Our Students Visit the AFS HQ Open House

What do you usually picture when you think of the office holiday party?  Personally, I think of the syndicated 2005-2013 TV program "The Office," but I figure that's about 90% because of the show's title.

Typically you take the conference room, move out the tables and chairs, throw up some tinsel, a Christmas tree, and a menorah, bada bing bada boom, holiday party. There's a few drinks, some present exchanging, everyone out by 5:00.

But it seems like the American Fisheries Society is a bit different.  Not the conference room, tinsel, tree, etc., but in who they choose to bring to their holiday party.  Instead of restricting the guest list to the employees and their families, all members of AFS were welcome to this open house.  And as a local student chapter, we jumped at the opportunity to attend.

Credit: American Fisheries Society (http://tinyurl.com/jjgly9g)
We arrived at 3:50, twenty minutes fashionably late to the event.  Due to some new construction on the property- an area also occupied by the Society of American Foresters, the Wildlife Society, The American Society for Remote Sensing, and the US Composting Council- we drove though the parking lot equivalent to a hedge maze before locating the exact place, a sleek building with modern features. On the first floor, we hung up our jackets and found our pristinely- displayed name tags. We signed the annual holiday card

The eyes are nightmare-fuel. But the snowman-innards are so cute!
With plenty of food, drinks, and dessert, we had a blast socializing with AFS headquarters employees, from the I.T. department to book and magazine editors.  We also marveled at the office decorations- exactly the thing you might imagine when picturing holiday party meets fisheries professionals, including an extensive and impressive collection of posters from several years of national meetings:



So from meeting new and interesting people to reconnecting with our "sister" subunit across the bay at University of Maryland Eastern Shore, we had a blast! Thanks again to the AFS for opening their doors to us and welcoming members to their event.  And to all our other readers, have your own happy holidays and a great new year.

Emily (Secretary) and Brian (President). Credit: AFS (http://tinyurl.com/jjgly9g)
UMES Sister Subunit. Credit: AFS (http://tinyurl.com/jjgly9g)

Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Oysters with Barnacles, Turtles with Backpacks. Our turn at the St. Mary's County STEM Festival & Expo

On November 14, three of our members, Suzan Shahrestani, Aimee Hoover, and Emily Liljestrand, all attended the St. Mary's County STEM Festival and Expo.  Here, students from public schools around the county came out to enjoy demonstrations, interactive games, and dozens of local and state scientific resources.  Naturally, as a local marine science institute, the Chesapeake Biological Laboratory and its graduate students were more than happy to help out.  We had a running video of Ms. Hoover's experiments on the best method to tag and track baby sea turtles (the titular "turtle backpacks"), an oyster shell under a dissection microscope to show all the organisms that need this hard surface to grow, and a collection of multicolored beads to demonstrate how sampling works.  And of course, we provided fish puzzles to teach identification/classification and handed out CBL stickers to any interested youngsters.  Check out some photos of our booth and the event as a whole:

Our trifold board with information relevant to the demonstrations
Suzan setting up her laptop to show underwater images of jellyfish and fish.
And of course, our adoring public:





And a few of the other attractions (AKA, the competition):



We were happy to be invited! We look forward to helping out again next year.

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

The One Where We go to the MEES Colloquium

Once a year, in the autumn, like the falling of the leaves or the contracting of the days, something occurs like clockwork.  The students of the Marine Estuarine and Environmental Sciences (MEES) graduate program at the University of Maryland meet at one of the several campuses to discuss outreach, communication skills, and just, shall we say "socialize" with the other students and faculty.  Last year we had the privileged to host this ourselves.  So for many this was either our first MEES colloquium, or at least the first one where we weren't running around like chickens with no heads.  All in all, the 1.5 day meeting was engaging, informative, and entertaining.

See below for our summary of the event.  I'll just say now, there's an astronaut involved. Get psyched.

Friday October 30, 2015, 9:00AM SHARP
We all take off towards Annapolis in our respective vehicles.  Those of us in Solomons who were planning to spend the night at the conference hotel all caravaned in one of our campus vehicles.


Friday October 30, 2015, 10:30ish
We arrived at the Crowne Plaza Annapolis and picked up our registration packets and name badges.  The MEES office was selling some sweet t-shirts as well!


 

Friday October 30, 2015, 11:00AM
We had our annual MEES student meeting, led by CBL PhD student Jenna Luek where we brainstormed about ways we can network professionally and socially as a MEES student group.  Suggestions included an alumni networking event on the professional side and "MEES Olympics" and/or a pirate cruise for the social aspect.


Friday October 30, 2015, All Afternoon
After a delicious lunch, the Friday afternoon session included updates on the new MEES curriculum and UMCES accreditation, as well as some professional development from the great folks at the Integrative Application Network (IAN).  We got to try our hand at make useful diagrams for presentations and publications, and we also go to practice creating "and/but/therefore" statements, some of which were submitted to our event Facebook page, to convey our research to the public.  Overall, it was a really informative and useful afternoon!


Friday October 30, 2015, Poster Session
After the afternoon session at the hotel, we headed to the historic Banneker-Douglass Museum in downtown Annapolis for our evening activities.  We started with a great poster session of 3rd-year MEES students (CBL students Grey Redding and Aimee Hoover shown below).


Friday October 30, 2015, Astronaut Talk
The highlight of the night was an amazing talk by MEES alumnus Ricky Arnold.  Ricky did his masters in the MEES program studying submerged aquatic vegetation in the Chesapeake Bay and after he graduated he joined NASA as an astronaut.  Ricky was a member of shuttle mission in 2009 which delivered a final pair of power-generating solar array wings and truss elements to the International Space Station.  Ricky dazzled us with photos of his space mission and gave us a fantastic view of Earth from space.  CBL students Kevin Kahover and Hillary Glandon were pretty excited to meet such an awesome celebrity!


 


Saturday October 31, 2015, Morning
After an evening of touring the local alcohol dispensing establishments, getting to see many of the residents dressed befitting the Halloween-eve night, we arose the next day for breakfast and presentations from graduate students in four areas of study.  Four MEES PhD students gave presentations on their graduate research, ranging from nutrient removal after farming on the Eastern Shore of Maryland, to copepod deaths in the Chesapeake Bay, to sponge symbioses in the Caribbean.  Our own Hillary Glandon (shown below presenting in a Halloween and science appropriate crab hat!) won first place for her work on the effects of temperature and acidification on blue crab in the Chesapeake bay. That's not all. Our own Jenna Leuk also walked home tied four ways for first place in the poster competition.  Bravo to them both!



We look forward to taking back to our home institutes all the information we learned at this educational colloquium.  We'll consider putting our research into a coherent, narrative form when explaining it to fellow scientists and laymen alike.  We'll consider using the IVN's extensive image library and resources when designing posters and presentations.  But above all, we look forward to organizing events with our fellow MEES students, who we know all the better because we had this event.

Thursday, October 29, 2015

Southern Maryland Oyster Festival

Seems like it was only a week ago we were reporting on our outreach activities at the Maryland Crab Festival (though really it was, like, half a year ago and that is posted here). But it wouldn't be Southern Maryland if there wasn't some festival or another every single weekend.  We have wine fests, boat fests, art fests, you name it. So inevitably an event came around that fit our interests as Fisheries scientists.  It would have been very easy to miss us, tucked away in the relative "boondocks" of the fairgrounds but we represented Chesapeake Biological Laboratory and our AFS Student Subunit proudly at the Maryland Oyster Festival in Leonardtown, MD, this last weekend October 17-18.

Despite the cold, we had a approximately 4,000 people visit our little booth!  In fact there were visitors from all over the country (mostly to participate in or watch the National Oyster Shucking Competition), but we were able to tempt over a few scientifically-inclined souls to marvel at our oyster demonstration and interactive watershed model.

Awwwww yeah.  Watershed model.
Oysters serve an important economic and ecological role in the Chesapeake.  We demonstrated the latter with a tank filled with juvenile oysters, growing on old discarded shells.  Throughout the day, the algae we provided which initially clouded the tank was consumed by these oysters, clearing out the water above.  In the environment, the same thing happens- Oysters help keep down harmful out-of-control "blooms," and make sure light can penetrate the water to plants and microbes below.

Nope, not an interested child.  Just our president, Brian Gallagher. But look at how comparatively clear that water is.
However, Oysters are also delicious. We've been harvesting them from the bay since the area was initially settled. This has been so thorough that today the biomass (total kg of oysters) is only 1% of what it was before we started fishing them. We were glad to talk about this and other local environmental issues to the thousands who stopped by our booth.

This event is hosted and sponsored by The Rotary Club of Lexington Park and this was the 50th anniversary. See below for some pictures of the booth and our members interacting with the public.