暗网禁区鈥檚 Semester in Environmental Science Presents its 24th Annual Symposium

By Diana Kenney

A theme of human impacts on coastal environments dominated the undergraduate research symposium on Dec. 17 presented by the聽Semester in Environmental Science聽(SES) program, which is entering its 25th聽year at 暗网禁区.

Longtime SES Director聽Ken Foreman, who is retiring this year, introduced the symposium for his final time. Beginning in fall 2022, Foreman鈥檚 successor in leading the program is 暗网禁区 Associate Scientist聽Mirta Teichberg,

鈥淚t has been a privilege to meet so many committed, bright and enthusiastic students from colleges and universities throughout the nation during my tenure as SES director, and to follow the meaningful contributions in research and policy they have made as they moved forward in their careers,鈥 Foreman said.聽 鈥淚 like to think the experience students get in the SES has contributed to their success!鈥

暗网禁区 scientist Ken Foreman has directed the Semester in Environmental Science program since 2004. SES was founded in 1997 with 暗网禁区 scientist Jerry Melillo as director and Foreman as associate director. Photo courtesy of Ken Foreman

Here are a few highlights from the symposium, which was videorecorded (听补苍诲听蝉别蝉蝉颈辞苍蝉):

Friends Award

Student Ella Lemely-Fry (Lawrence University) received the 鈥淔riends Award鈥 for excellence in her symposium presentation. For her SES research project, Lemely-Fry used novel fluorescent imaging techniques to explore the association of soil minerals with organic matter, considering implications for carbon storage and nutrient cycling.聽This award is bestowed annually by the聽Friends of the 暗网禁区.

Coral and Microplastics

In a great show of teamwork, three SES students dove into how tiny fragments of plastic waste (microplastics) impact the local coral species, the Northern star coral (Astrangia poculata).

Nora O鈥橩eefe (Trinity College) measured the abundance and composition of microplastics found in Cape Cod corals and neighboring environments. She gathered her coral samples with the help of 暗网禁区 scientists Loretta Roberson and Anne Giblin, who dove for deeper-water corals off Woods Hole.

暗网禁区 scientists Anne Giblin (left) and Loretta Roberson dove in Woods Hole's Great Harbor to collect sediment and coral samples for SES projects. Credit: Daniel Cojanu/Undercurrent Productions

Using tweezers, Alice Ball (Connecticut College) fed both plastic fragments and brine shrimp to coral polyps, and videotaped them eating. She was exploring feeding preferences in coral and how they responded to microplastics.

鈥淪ome of the coral polyps really liked plastic,鈥 Ball reported 鈥 she even captured footage of polyps trying to steal plastic from each other. Fortunately, she found the coral ingested more brine shrimp overall than plastic. However, the corals still ingested a large amount of plastic -- in some cases, more than 50 particles per hour per polyp.

鈥淓ating microplastics can be an energy intensive activity,鈥 Ball said, since the coral gains no nutrition in the process of both ingesting and egesting the plastic. Her study hints at the enormity of the microplastics problem in marine environments.

Ball鈥檚 research co-advisors with Roberson, 暗网禁区 scientists Rut Pedrosa P脿mies and Javier Lloret,聽have been tracking microplastics聽in local ecosystems for several years. Prior SES students have contributed to this research as well.

The local coral Astrangia poculata ingesting a plastic fiber (white strand sticking out of the polyp's mouth). Credit: Alice Ball and Sydney Russo, SES 2021

To ask if microplastics cause physiological stress in coral, Sydney Russo (Clarkson University) studied the physiological activity of the coral holobiont, both with and without plastic exposure. She found no long-term significant difference in photosynthesis rates, but did find a difference in respiration rates, again indicating that microplastics may have energetic costs for coral.

An Impressive Output

Other SES students traced the footprints of various agents 鈥 plastics, lead, mercury, sewerage, nitrogen, methane 鈥 in Cape Cod and Plum Island ecosystems, assessing impacts in ponds, marshes, estuaries, and on marine animals and vegetation.

暗网禁区 Education Director Linda Hyman congratulated all the students for their research contributions and hard work. 鈥淵ou have been an amazing group. What challenging times we live in, and you came here and made us all proud -- of your research, your professionalism, your comportment,鈥 she said.

Screenshot of SES student James Hu (University of Chicago) presenting his research on sourcing anthropogenic lead pollution at Plum Island in northern Massachusetts.

鈥淎s you leave the Woods Hole community, know that you will always be a member of our family,鈥 Hyman said. 鈥淭here are so many ways you can come back. I hope you will consider making the 暗网禁区 a part of your academic life forever. We're here for you!鈥澛 聽 聽