Showing posts with label Randi Rotjan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Randi Rotjan. Show all posts

4/13/11

Do you have what it takes to be a professional child?

Tonight, Dr. Randi Rotjan, a New England Aquarium research scientist, came to speak at our Sea TURTLE class. According to her, a being a marine biologist is a lot like being a professional child because the world’s oceans are like giant sandboxes to explore. As a marine biologist, Randi has done research on topics including reef-building corals and hermit crabs. We learned about how much time and hard work it took her to reach this level.


Dr. Randi Rotjan in the field.



Being a marine biologist, Randi gets to travel the world and explore places like this:


Carrie Bow Cay, Belize (Read field reports from this expedition here)


And this:



The Red Sea (Read field reports from this expedition in 2010 and 2011)

And this:


The Phoenix Islands (Read field reports from this expedition here)


One of the main reasons that Randi goes to these places is to ask scientific questions and then try to answer them. Sometimes, researchers think of questions before going to such places and other times the places inspire the questions. Once Randi asks a question, she would do research until she is satisfied with the answer. There will be times when the available answers do not satisfy her and sometimes there won’t be an answer at all.

Randi also talked to us about coral reefs in the Bahamas and gave us a few tips in what to look for when we’re diving. One thing I’ll definitely be looking forward to is following a fish and observing what they eat. Apparently, you can hear some species like parrotfish making crunching sounds underwater! Thank you Randi for coming to talk to us! It was awesome!

Next stop: Bahamas! We’re so close!

2/6/10

Questions, corals and inspiration!

There are lots of great things about working at the Aquarium, but one thing many of us enjoy is working with people that do amazing research and conservation work all over the world. And if you can manage to catch our scientists in Boston between trips to a research spot, you can convince them to talk about their work and show some great pictures!


Randi answering a question for our SEA TURTLEs

Such was the case when Dr. Randi Rotjan came to speak with our SEA TURTLEs about her research on corals, the scientific process and how she got to where she is today. (Learn about Randi's research in the Red Sea here.) It was a fantastic lecture with many students commenting on how much they learned and were inspired to do something to help our oceans. Here two SEA TURTLEs, Oriana and Nick, respond to the lecture.




Oriana taking some notes


Oriana's words:
It was so amazing to learn how Dr. Rotjan devotes her life to answering her own questions through her research!! It was really interesting to hear about everything. Her talk made me want to learn more about corals! One of my favorites things she said was "the only constant is change." This inspired me to keep exploring, learning more and to think about (and answer!) my own questions. I cannot wait for the next class!





Nick posing a question about potential frustrations


Nick's thoughts:

It was an incomparable to discuss corals and marine ecosystems with someone with not only an impressive aptitude for the subject but also with a person who possesses a deeply inspiring passion for our world's oceans and all of its hidden treasures. I left the discussion reassured that we, as "stewards of a blue planet", have the power to establish a fighting chance for the natural world and in motivating our peers to care about the ocean. I was amazed and grew very excited about my upcoming adventure!

Pretty powerful words from our SEA TURTLEs! Things could not have worked out better. Everyone learned about corals, the importance and power of being able to ask your own research questions and became inspired for the future. Clearly Dr. Rotjan made an impact on our young ocean stewards. And as both Oriana and Nick both expressed, I cannot wait for the next class and for the upcoming adventure!

- Jo

2/5/10

SEA TURTLE hosts its inaugural guest speaker

Did you know that Anthozoa means "flower animal" or that corals have symbiotic algae called zooxanthellae inside of them that give them much of their color? Dr. Randi Rotjan knows this and so much more about corals. She is a coral reef research scientist/Principal Investigator at the New England Aquarium. She was SEA TURTLE's first guest speaker at Wednesday's night class.


Dr. Rotjan describing the structure of corals.

Dr. Rotjan's journey on her quest to become a marine biologist/evolutionary ecologist took 15 years of post high school education. She explained that the reward for all this time and effort is being able to ask her own scientific questions and then use her knowledge, creative thinking and experiments to find the answers. She described the process as "CSI: Marine Biology".

I really enjoyed Dr. Rotjan's description of coral reefs...they are like underwater cities, with each coral analogous to an apartment building. The corals are the engineers, the architects, and the workers. No corals, no reefs, no reef creatures.


Reefs with and without corals

To measure the health of a coral reef, she will gather information by measuring things. Dr. Rotjan will set up a transect, a system for measuring a specific area and recording the animals living in that area. She will also photo document the site using underwater video equipment.


Randi using a transect

By doing this, she is measuring diversity, abundance, biomass and the general condition of the reef. The health of the reef can be measured by revisiting the site to see how the corals have changed over time. Dr. Rotjan traveled to the Phoenix Islands in 2009, and the good news there is that the health of the coral reefs is improving.


New coral growth

She says being a good diver, a good citizen, staying curious, challenging yourselves and others to find solutions and living blue are all ways to help the coral reefs. And, she cautions not to fall prey to shifting baselines, which means a failure to notice slow, chronic change around you.

For more information on Dr. Rotjan and her research, please visit the Phoenix Islands Expedition Blog and the Global Explorers Blog on the Aquarium's website.

I know one difference between Dr. Rotjan's research expeditions and SEA TURTLE's expedition - our mantra will be "eat-dive-eat-dive..." not "dive-eat-dive-eat"! I can't wait to get under water and visit the coral reefs of the Bahamas!

- Barbara