Guest writer: Maggie O’Rourke-Liggett, GEMM Lab summer intern, Oregon State University,
One of the biggest obstacles an undergraduate can face is fulfilling the degree requirement of completing an internship or research opportunity. With almost every university and degree program requiring it for graduation and many employers requiring prior experience, the amount of pressure and competition is intense.
After being rejected from the internships I applied for earlier in the year, I heard about Dr. Leigh Torres’s research with the Geospatial Ecology of Marine Megafauna (GEMM) Lab . I decided to email her and ask if she had any open positions. Fast-forward a few weeks and I am collaborating with Florence Sullivan, a recent masters graduate from OSU, on the logistics of my Gray Whale Foraging Behavior internship with the GEMM Lab.
During my time with the GEMM Lab team, I have been assisting with photo identification analysis of gray whales (Eschrichtius robustus), using a theodolite and Pythagoras computer program to track their movements, collecting samples of the zooplankton they eat, and recording other oceanographic data with our time-depth recorder. This project is hoping to identify the drivers of gray whale fine-scale foraging behavior. For instance: Why do gray whales spend more time in some areas than others? Does the type or density of prey affect their behavior? Do the whales use static features like kelp beds to help find their food? As a senior currently studying oceanography, who desires to study whale behavior in the future, this internship is like finding a gold mine.
Ever since day one at Hatfield Marine Science Center, I’ve been working with people who share the same passions for marine mammals as me. Spending hours upon hours sorting thousands of pictures may seem like a painful, tedious job, but knowing my work helps others to update existing identification catalogs makes it worthwhile. Plus, who wouldn’t want to look at whales all day?! After a while, you start to recognize specific individuals based on their various pigment configurations and scars. Once you can recognize individuals, it makes the sorting go by faster and helps with recognizing individual whales in the wild faster. It’s always exciting to sort through the photos and observe from the cliff or kayak and recognize a whale from the photo identification work.
After Florence taught me how to set up and operate the theodolite, a survey tool used to track a whale’s movements, we taught a class to undergrads on how to use it. I’ll never get over how people’s faces lit up when we discussed how the instrument works and its role in the overall mission.
These past two weeks at OSU’s Port Orford Field Station have been like living on a little slice of heaven. My days are filled with clear views of the coast and the sound of waves crashing serve as a backdrop on my home for the month, the bed-and-breakfast turned field station. Each morning, the sun fills my room as I gather my gear for the day and help my teammates load the truck. We spend long days on the water collecting zooplankton samples and GoPro video or on the cliff recording whale behavior through the theodolite. To anyone searching for an internship and feeling burnt out from completing application after application, don’t give up. You’ll find your slice of heaven too.
Great post, Maggie! We’re very pleased to host the whale researchers again this summer at the Port Orford Field Station, and excited to hear more about your work!
Heck yeah! First blog post!
What a terrific experience!! And its all because you persevered in finding an intership. Now, it seems, you may have fpund your life’s work. The other side od this experience is the vision and persistence of Tom Calvanese, Leesa Cobb, and others that created the field station opportunity. Not only are you doing valuable science, you demonstrating the value of having this kind of facility in Port Orford!!
It was great to meet you and Florence yesterday evening, Maggie! I enjoyed reading this post. This project sure does sound like a slice of heaven. I can’t wait to learn more about your progress!
What a tremendous revel in!! And its all because you continued in locating an intership. Now, it seems, you could have fpund your life’s work. the alternative facet od this revel in is the imaginative and prescient and patience of Tom Calvanese, Leesa Cobb, and others that created the sector station possibility. no longer simplest are you doing valuable science, you demonstrating the fee of getting this sort of facility in Port Orford!!