This is
Stephanie Dloniak, Adjunct Assistant Professor of Zoology at MSU, Hyena Project
alumnus, and wildlife biologist and science writer based in Kenya.
This summer we
have several IRES students in the Mara. IRES is the acronym for the program titled
“International Research Experience for Students,” which is funded through a
grant to Dr. Holekamp from the National Science Foundation. Through this
program, a number of undergraduate students are chosen to travel to our field site
in Kenya and engage in research for about 2 months. Students assist with specific
projects led by current graduate students. In addition, they learn how to do
anything and everything that needs done on a long-term project on the
behavioral ecology of a large carnivore - from identifying individual hyenas to
assisting with field experiments to changing tires on the research vehicles.
This is the
third year that the Holekamp lab has hosted IRES students, and for the first
time we are incorporating a significant writing component in the experience. The students are
participating in technical writing activities as well as trying their hands at
science writing for a lay audience. For the latter task, some of the students will
contribute several blog posts here.
Over the next
two months, we are pleased to bring you posts from the following IRES students:
Moira Donovan is originally from
Worthington, Ohio. She is an Anthropology major and a junior at Grinnell College in Iowa. Moira says that she applied to the IRES program because she
“did a Mentored Advanced Project on captive Japanese macaque social behavior
last year and realized her love for animal research.” She was in southern India
when she applied for the program and knew she wanted to travel more; she thinks
the IRES program incorporates perfectly her dual interests in animal social
behavior and travel.
Benjamin Hochfelder
hails from Omaha,
Nebraska, and is currently a junior at the University of Nabraska at Omaha,
majoring in Neuroscience.
Ben’s application to the IRES program was motivated
by his “desire to experience the pursuit of science from the perspective of
both controlled laboratory experiments and ecologically relevant field work.”
He had also read a number of the papers produced by the Holekamp lab and had
become fascinated by the spotted hyena as a model organism.
Emily Thorne is from Rancho
Cucamonga, California, and is a senior at Humboldt State University (CA). She
is majoring in Wildlife Biology (with a concentration in Conservation and
Applied Vertebrate Ecology) and minoring in Applied Statistics. Emily applied
for the IRES program because she is interested in anthropogenic effects on
wildlife behavior and how it relates to wildlife conservation. “The IRES
program seemed to fit perfectly with my goal of becoming a wildlife
conservation researcher and I couldn't pass up the opportunity to apply for
this once in a lifetime experience.”
Stay tuned for the first IRES
post tomorrow - Emily will tell you
about her first few days here in “Pains, strains, and automobiles: Welcome to
field research in the Mara.”
1 comment:
What a grerat idea! I can't wait!
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