Awards and Honors
Each year, SoMAS confers a number of awards on undergraduate and graduate students in recognition of exceptional academic performance, extramural activities, and service to the SoMAS community. Additionally, SoMAS faculty members regularly receive national and international recognition from professional and other societies for their scholarship and/or teaching excellence. Below is a list of awards to SoMAS students and faculty during the report period. Specific information on the student awards can be found on the SoMAS web site.
Faculty and Staff Honors
Faculty Early Career Development Program (CAREER)
2017 Hyemi Kim, SoMAS
2017 Lesley Thorne, SoMAS
American Meteorological Society Honors
2016 Marvin Geller, SoMAS
American Fisheries Society (AFS) Oscar E. Sette Award
Outstanding Marine Fishery Biologist
2016 – Ellen Pikitch
Stony Brook Alumni Association Dean’s Choice Award
Best Thesis Awards
- Adham Younes, MS
- Natasha Gownaris, PhD
- Jennifer Jankowiak, MS
- Alison Flanagan, PhD
Professor Xiangding Wu Memorial Award
Faculty
With the addition of Sustainability Studies, the faculty at SoMAS have grown considerably:
Faculty
Sustainability Studies Faculty
ITPA Faculty
Endowed Professorships
Bassem Allam
Endowed Professor of Marinetics
Marine invertebrate physiology and health, Shellfish Genomics, Aquaculture
Josephine Aller
Professor
Marine benthic ecology, invertebrate zoology,marine microbiology, biogeochemistry
Robert Aller
Distinguished Professor
Marine biogeochemistry, marine animal-sediment relations.
Katherine Aubrecht
Division Head, Sustainability Studies / Associate Professor / Faculty Director, Coastal Environmental Studies
Phone: 631-632-5360
Fax: 631-632-5375
chemical education, sustainable and green chemistry
Steven Beaupré
Associate Professor
Marine Biogeochemistry, Chemical kinetics of natural organic matter, radiocarbon analyses
David Black
Associate Professor
Paleoclimatology, paleoceanography, deep-sea sediments, marine micropaleontology
Henry Bokuniewicz
Distinguished Service Professor
Near shore transport processes, coastal groundwater hydrology, coastal sedimentation, marine geophysics
Malcolm Bowman
Distinguished Service Professor
Coastal ocean and estuarine dynamics
Bruce Brownawell
Associate Professor
Biogeochemistry of organic pollutants in seawater and groundwater.
Kurt Bretsch
Lecturer / Faculty Director, Semester by the Sea
Marine and Environmental Science Education, Coastal Community Ecology
Arlene Kons Cassidy
Lecturer / Faculty Director, Sustainability Studies
Robert Cerrato
Professor
Benthic ecology, population and community dynamics.
Edmund Chang
Professor
Atmospheric dynamics and diagnoses, climate dynamics, synoptic meteorology
J. Kirk Cochran
Distinguished Professor Emeritus
Marine geo-chemistry, use of radionuclides as geochemical tracers; diagenesis of marine sediments.
Brian Colle
Professor / Director, ITPA
Extreme weather, coastal meteorology, weather forecasting, regional climate change
Jackie Collier
Associate Professor
Phytoplankton physiological ecology; Biocomplexity and microbial diversity; Planktonic ecosystem processes in marine, estuarine, and freshwater systems
Nolwenn Dheilly
Adjunct Assistant Professor
Evolution of Host-Parasite Interactions
Anthony Dvarskas
Adjunct Assistant Professor
Environmental economics, ecosystem services and resilience of coastal ecosystems, economics of restoration, natural capital accounting
Ali Farhadzadeh
Assistant Professor
Nearshore hydrodynamics, sediment transport, wave-current-sediment-structure interaction, resilient coastal protection systems, coastal flooding
Donovan Finn
Assistant Professor / Faculty Director, Environmental Design, Policy, and Planning
community-based planning, disaster recovery, resilience policy, urban design and placemaking
Nicholas Fisher
Distinguished Professor / Director, CIDER
Marine phytoplankton physiology and ecology, biogeo-chemistry of metals, marine pollution
Charles Flagg
Research Professor
Continental Shelf Dynamics, Bio-Physical Interactions in Shelf Systems, Climate Change Effects on Coastal Systems, Shipboard ADCPs on Volunteer Observing Ships
Roger Flood
Research Professor
Marine geology, sediment dynamics, continental margin sedimentation
Michael French
Associate Professor
supercell and tornado dynamics; Doppler weather radar applications; mesoscale meteorology
Michael Frisk
Professor
Fish ecology, population modeling and life history theory
Christopher Gobler
Endowed Chair
Coastal ecosystem ecology, climate change, harmful algal blooms, phytoplankton, ocean acidification, effects of multiple stressors on coastal marine resources, aquatic biogeochemistry
Sultan Hameed
Professor
Climate change: analysis, impacts, and predictability
Heidi Hutner
Associate Professor
Environmental literature and film; ecofeminism; environmental justice; feminism; race studies; women’s literature; Restoration and eighteenth-century literature and culture.
Sung-Gheel (Gil) Jang
Assistant Professor / Faculty Director, Geospatial Center
Geospatial Sciences and geographic information systems
Marat Khairoutdinov
Professor
Climate modeling, high-resolution cloud modeling, cloud microphysics, super-parameterization, massively parallel super-computing, cloud parameterization
Hyemi Kim
Associate Professor
low frequency climate variability, tropical meteorology, ocean-atmosphere interaction, prediction and predictability, tropical cyclone activity, extreme events
Daniel Knopf
Professor
Atmospheric Chemistry, Microphysics and Chemistry of Atmospheric Aerosols, Heterogeneous Atmospheric Chemistry and Kinetics
Pavlos Kollias
Professor
Cloud Microphysics and Dynamics, Environmental Remote Sensing, Radar Meteorology and Technology
Ping Liu
Research Associate Professor
Climate change, dynamics and modeling;
Darcy Lonsdale
Professor
Ecology and physiology of marine zooplankton; food web dynamics of estuarine plankton and the impacts of harmful algal blooms.
Glenn Lopez
Professor Emeritus
Marine benthic ecology, animal-sediment interactions
Kamazima Lwiza
Associate Professor
Structure and dynamics of shelf-seas and remote sensing oceanography
John Mak
Professor
Trace gas isotopic composition for the reconstruction of atmospheric chemistry in the paleo atmosphere; trace gas emissions from the biosphere; development of instrumentation platforms for research aircraft.
Anne McElroy
Professor
Aquatic Toxicology
Elizabeth Terese Newman
Associate Professor
Mesoamerican Ethnohistory, Historical Archaeology, and Environmental Archaeology with a specialty in Zooarchaeology.
Janet Nye
Adjunct Associate Professor
Fish ecology, climate variability, global environmental change, ecosystem-based management, ocean acidification, climate change
Emmanuelle Pales-Espinosa
Research Associate Professor
Shellfish physiology, Particle selection mechanisms in suspension-feeding bivalves, Algology
Bradley Peterson
Associate Professor
Community ecology of seagrass dominated ecosystems
Ellen Pikitch
Endowed Professor of Ocean Conservation Science / Executive Director, IOCS / Faculty Director, MCP Program
Ocean conservation, fisheries management, ecosystem-based approaches, endangered fishes, sharks, sturgeon
Sharon Pochron
Lecturer / Faculty Director, Ecosystems and Human Impact
ecotoxicology and soil ecology
Roy Price
Research Assistant Professor
Hydrothermal vents, water-rock reactions, toxic metal & metalloid cycling in coastal environments, arsenic bioaccumulation, vent-biota relationships, and alkaline shallow-sea vents
H. James Quigley Jr.
Retired Lecturer
Kevin Reed
Associate Professor
Climate Modeling; Climate Change Attribution, Tropical Cyclones; Climate Extremes; Atmospheric Dynamics, Science Policy
Tara Rider
Lecturer
Maritime and Environmental History, Sustainability
Carl Safina
Endowed Chair
Ocean animals, fisheries, human relationship with nature
Mary Scranton
Professor Emeritus
Marine geochemistry, biological-chemical interactions in seawater
Donna Selch
Lecturer
Remote Sensing and GIS; water quality modeling; hyperspectral remote sensing; object-based image analysis; environmental and vegetation; digital image analysis; coastal changes; unmanned aerial vehicles
Larry Swanson
Associate Dean, SoMAS / Director, WRMI
Coastal Oceanography, marine pollution, marine policy, recycling and reuse of waste materials, waste management
David Taylor
Assistant Professor / Faculty Director, EHM
environmental humanities, history of naturalist studies, American Literature, nature writing
Gordon Taylor
Professor
Marine microbiology, interests in microbial ecology, trophodynamics, anoxia, hypoxia, single-cell analysis, Raman microspectrometry and atomic force microscopy
Lesley Thorne
Assistant Professor
Bio-physical and trophic interactions in marine ecology; application of spatial analysis and landscape ecology techniques to marine conservation
Nils Volkenborn
Associate Professor
Sediment biogeochemistry, animal-sediment interactions, benthic ecology
Joe Warren
Associate Professor
Acoustical oceanography, Zooplankton behavior and ecology
Laura Wehrmann
Assistant Professor
Marine Biogeochemistry, Geochemical element cycles, Deep Biosphere
Robert Wilson
Associate Professor Emeritus
Estuarine and coastal ocean dynamics
Christopher Wolfe
Associate Professor
Physical oceanography, large-scale circulation: theory and modeling.
Karina Yager
Assistant Professor
Climate change impacts; Remote Sensing; Land-cover and Land-Use Change; Alpine Ecosystems; Andes; Mountain Societies, and Sustainability Studies
Minghua Zhang
Professor
Climate modelling, atmospheric dynamics
Qingzhi Zhu
Associate Professor
Chem-/Bio- Sensors, Marine Biogeochemistry, Trace Elements, Environmental Analytical Chemistry
Carl Safina Endowed Research Chair for Nature and Humanity
Carl Safina is the inaugural recipient of the Carl Safina Endowed Research Chair for Nature and Humanity in the School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences.
Carl Safina is an international leader in ocean conservation and is the first endowed chair in the School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences. Through Carl Safina’s work, the Safina Center aims to help people understand how the ocean supports all life on our planet. This is a rare opportunity for the campus to celebrate academic and research excellence.
Marinetics Endowed Professorship in Marine Science
The Marinetics Endowed Professorship in Marine Science was made possible by the generous and gratifying support of a donor. It is conferred to a SoMAS full-time faculty who conducts world-class research in one or more of the following areas: population biology of fisheries, fishery ecology, marine ecology, aquaculture, marine animals, marine animal health, marine habitat health, and closely related areas in marine science.
Bassem Allam has been selected as the first Marinetics Endowed Professor in Marine Sciences. This tremendous honor recognizes the quality, productivity, and importance of Professor Allam’s research. An investiture ceremony will be organized by the university to celebrate the conferral of the professorship. You will be invited to the event at that time.
Coastal Ecology and Conservation Endowed Chair
Chris Gobler is the inaugural recipient of the Coastal Ecology and Conservation Endowed Chair in the School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences.
The Coastal Ecology and Conservation Endowed Professorship was made possible by the generous support of four long term and dedicated donors committed to the research conducted by Chris Gobler.
Stephen Baines
Associate Professor
Aquatic ecosystem ecology, ecological stoichiometry
Jeffrey Levinton
Distinguished Professor
Conservation biology, developmental evolution
Heather Lynch
Assistant Professor
Development and application of statistics
Christine O'Connell
Assistant Professor
connections between science and society, with a focus on marine spatial planning, ecosystem-based management, waste management, conservation planning, and ecosystem services.
Dianna Padilla
Professor
Aquatic ecology, applied ecology, conservation biology
Sheldon Reaven
Associate Professor
Science and technology policy; energy and environmental problems and issues; environmental and waste management, recycling and pollution prevention; risk analysis and life-cycle analysis; nuclear, chemical, and biological threats; technology assessment; homeland security and the war on terrorism
Harold Walker
Professor
surface chemical processes in natural and engineered systems, with an emphasis on clean water
Adjunct Faculty
James Ammerman
Adjunct Professor
Aquatic microbial ecology and biogeochemistry; estuarine, coastal, and open ocean phosphorus cycling; coastal eutrophication and hypoxia; molecular biology of microbial phosphorus assimilation; instrument development and automation; academic leadership and administration; research administration.
Michael Cahill
Adjunct Professor
Application and development of environmental law in local government
David Conover
Adjunct Professor
Mark Fast
Adjunct Assistant Professor
Aquatic diseases and Immunology
Charles Flagg
Research Professor
Continental Shelf Dynamics, Bio-Physical Interactions in Shelf Systems, Climate Change Effects on Coastal Systems, Shipboard ADCPs on Volunteer Observing Ships
Huan Feng
Adjunct Professor
source, transport and fate of contaminants in estuarine and coastal systems
Roxanne Karimi
Adjunct Assistant Professor
Dana Hall 167 Ecological stoichiometry of metals, aquatic environmental health, and physiological ecology.
paul.kemp@hawaii.edu
Growth and activity of marine microbes in water column and sediment; benthic-pelagic interactions; molecular ecology of marine bacteria
Lee Koppelman
Professor Emeritus
Ph.D., 1970 New York University
Wuyin Lin
Adjunct Assistant Professor
Ph.D., 2002, Stony Brook University Climate Modeling, Climate Change.
Yangang Liu
Adjunct Professor
Physical, optical and chemical properties of atmospheric particles, including aerosols, clouds and precipitation
Stephan Munch
Adjunct Associate Professor
Evolutionary ecology of growth and life history traits, Evolution in harvested populations, Applied population dynamics modeling, Mathematical modeling and statistics
Emmanuelle Pales-Espinosa
Adjunct Associate Professor / Project Associate
Shellfish physiology, Particle selection mechanisms in suspension-feeding bivalves, Algology
Roy Price
Research Assistant Professor
Hydrothermal vents, water-rock reactions, toxic metal & metalloid cycling in coastal environments, arsenic bioaccumulation, vent-biota relationships, and alkaline shallow-sea vents
Nicole Riemer
Adjunct Assistant Professor
The interaction of atmospheric transport processes with chemistry and microphysics, particularly for trace gases and aerosol particles in the troposphere
Frank Roethel
Adjunct Professor
Discovery Hall 131 Ph.D., 1982, State University of New York at Stony Brook Environmental chemistry, Municipal solid waste management impact
Jay Tanski
Adjunct Lecturer
Coastal erosion processes and management, GIS applications for coastal management
Andrew Vogelmann
Adjunct Professor
Atmospheric radiative transfer, cloud and aerosol climate interactions, climate and the Earth’s energy balance, remote sensing, cloud and climate modeling
Bill Wise
Adjunct Lecturer
Fisheries management, marine law and policy, aquaculture, bon vivant
Sandra Yuter
Adjunct Professor
Adjunct Lecturers
Mirza Beg
Adjunct Lecturer
Maria Brown
Lecturer
M.S., Long Island University
Kimberly Durham
Adjunct Lecturer
James Gilmore
Adjunct Lecturer
Fisheries Management, marine law and policy.
Arthur Kopelman
Adjunct Lecturer
Jeong-A Seong
Adjunct Lecturer
Jay Tanski
Adjunct Lecturer
Coastal erosion processes and management, GIS applications for coastal management
Jeffrey Tongue
Adjunct Lecturer
Michael White
Adjunct Lecturer
Bill Wise
Adjunct Lecturer
Fisheries management, marine law and policy, aquaculture, bon vivant
Stephen Abrams
Flax Pond Manager
David Bowman
Fleet Manager
Andrew Brosnan
Captain
Ginny Clancy
Educational Programs Coordinator
105 Endeavour Hall631-632-8681
Michael Doall
Senior Research Support Specialist
Eileen Doyle
Staff Assistant
Courtney Ferland
Staff Assistant
Christina Fink
Education Programs Assistant
107 Endeavour Hall631-632-8680
Brian Gagliardi
Captain
Paulette Gerber
HR Assistant
John Graham
Accounts Assistant
Chris Harter
Captain
Christina Heilbrun
Research Scientist
David Hirschberg
Senior Research Scientist
Charise Kelly
Grants Coordinator
631-632-3752
Mark Lang
Computer Support Specialist
Stefanie Massucci
Senior Assistant Dean
Endeavour Hall 145631-632-8781
Maureen Murphy
Project Staff Associate
Steve Ortega
Assistant to the Dean
Christina Ozelis
Academic Advising Assistant
W0511 Melville Library 631-632-9404
Chris Paparo
Marine Sciences Center Manager
Donna Sammis
MASIC Librarian
631-632-8679
Christine Santora
Assistant Director for Policy and Outreach
631-632-8935
Jason Schweitzer
Deckhand and Small Vessel Captain
Alex Sneddon
Instrument Specialist
Discovery Hall 111631-632-8706
Bonnie Stephens
Staff Assistant, WRMI
Hanne Tracy
MASIC Librarian
631-632-8679
Diane Vigliotta
Staff Assistant, ITPA
631-632-8009
Karen Warren
Assistant to the Director, CIDER
Mark Wiggins
Facilities Manager
Kaitlin Willig
Research Technician
Thomas Wilson
Instrument Engineer
Discovery Hall 107a
Hilary Wolfskill
Center Administrator
Josh Zacharias
Research Technician
Tatiana Zaliznyak
NARMIL Technician
Shelagh Zegers
Senior Research Support Specialist, Fisher Lab
Catherine Ziegler
Research Technician
Mary Scranton
Cindy Lee
James Hoffman
Joann Radway
Carol Dovi
Gina Gartin
Eileen Goldsmith
Retirees
As representatives of the public for the School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences (SoMAS), members of the Dean’s Council are the primary external force moving the School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences to the realization of its opportunities for mission fulfillment and service to its constituencies. Working with the Dean and his designated representatives, the Dean’s Council provides advice and guidance in the areas of planning, advancement, organization, and operations. The current Dean’s council members are:
Sarah Chasis | Senior Attorney and Director, Oceans Program, Natural Resources Defense Council | |
Rosalind Walrath | Board, New York League of Conservation Voters. | |
Michael Halpern | President, East Hampton Beach Preservation Society | |
Maureen Sherry Klinsky | Board, Peconic Baykeeper | |
Robert Komitor | Levy Phillips & Konigsberg, LLP | |
Laurie J. Landeau, VMD | Associate Director, Aquavet; Marinetics, Inc. and Co-founder, Marinetics | |
Xiaodan (Danny) Lu, Ph. D. | President and CEO, Seawolf Technologies Inc., Chinawind Communications Limited | |
Robert J. Maze, Ph. D. | Co-founder and Vice President of Marinetics, Inc. | |
Jane Ross | Vice President, Alfred and Jane Ross Foundation, Inc. | |
Andrew Sabin | President, Andrew Sabin Family Foundation | |
Dieter von Lehsten | Co-chair, Town of Southampton Sustainability Advisory Committee | |
Michael White | Environmental Law Practice | |
Michael J. Zeitlin | CEO, Aqumin LLC | |
Christopher Zeppie | Director, Environmental Policy, Programs and Compliance at The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey | |
Ex Officio: | ||
Larry Swanson, Ph. D. | Interim Dean, School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences | |
Deborah Lowen-Klein | Assistant Vice President for Advancement, Stony Brook University |
Alumni
One of SoMAS’s paramount objectives is to educate and train students to become the next generation of marine and atmospheric scientists, environmental resource managers, and citizens who possess a fundamental grasp of environmental issues and the choices that society faces in handling these issues. The alumni of our undergraduate and graduate education programs thus represent perhaps most important of the School’s “products,” extending the influence and impact of SoMAS on the broader society of which it is a part. Of all the things we produce, our alumni are inarguably the most valuable and have the most impact on the issues and problems that command the School’s attention. SoMAS alums occupy a dizzying variety of positions within academia, natural resource management agencies at all levels, and in the offices of non-governmental organizations. Alumni are often in a position to play a critical role in support of various SoMAS research and educational efforts. Several SoMAS alumni are represented on the Dean’s Council, a small assembly of influential individuals who advise the Dean on overall program development priorities and help to get initiatives underway. Several years ago, SoMAS began a concerted effort to strengthen connections with its alumni. Working with the Stony Brook University Alumni Association, our alumni records have been consolidated so that our communications with alumni are more comprehensive, reliable and, ultimately, effective.
MSRC/SoMAS produced its first masters degree graduates in 1971 and, a decade later, its first Ph.D. recipients. Through the years, 911 students have joined the ranks of SoMAS alumni, 266 with the Ph.D. and 715 with a masters degree, and 72 students received both degrees. As of December 2015, a total of 611 students have graduated with an undergraduate degree from SoMAS. Of these, 264 received the Environmental Studies degree, 59 the Atmospheric Sciences degree, 120 the Marine Sciences degree and 168 the Marine Vertebrate biology degree.
To each of our alumni, there is a story. Alumni below were highlighted between 2014 and 2015.
Mark Nepf (MS, 2017)
Mark Nepf was an MS student in the Dvarskas Lab of Environmental Economics from 2015 to 2017. During his time at SoMAS, he worked on a hedonic analysis of Suffolk County residential real estate, with a focus on the potential impact of coastal water clarity. By determining if improved water clarity could positively influence housing values, his project aimed to provide an economic measure of the benefits of coastal remediation.
After graduation, Mark accepted a position with Resources For The Future, where he is working on similar environmental valuation studies that look at the impacts of air pollution. He credits his time spent at SoMAS helping him land on the job path he hoped for.
SoMAS alumni create textbook on “Evolution of Meteorology”
Kevin Teague and Nicole Gallicchio were students in the Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences B.S. Program at Stony Brook University. Kevin graduated in December of 2011, and started working at FleetWeather Inc in Hopewell Junction, NY as a Marine Meteorologist Technician. After Nicole graduated in May of 2012, both decided to open their own private weather forecasting and consulting company, Forecasting Consultants LLC. Together they built and ran the company with success, working with event planners from around the country, various law firms, private contractors, and more.
In April 2015, Kevin and Nicole were asked to be part of an environmental textbook series and started work on researching and authoring their own textbook called The Evolution of Meteorology: a look into the past, present, and future of weather forecasting. This summer, after over two years of dedicated and strenuous research and work, Wiley Blackwell Publishing Company approved and published the textbook. Kevin has continued to be a weather enthusiast while also working full-time in Administration at the North Shore Public Library in Shoreham, NY. Nicole has continued to run and build Forecasting Consultants LLC, while also working full-time in strategic management positions.
Teague, K. A., & Gallicchio, N. (2017). The Evolution of Meteorology: A Look Into the Past, Present and Future of Weather Forecasting. John Wiley & Sons.
Michael Colbert (BS, 2015)
Everyone talks about the weather, but Michael Colbert has more than a casual interest in that topic — he studied it at Stony Brook University. To be sure, the atmospheric and oceanic sciences major can’t remember a time when he wasn’t passionate about the weather. “My mother says that as a baby, there were times when I wouldn’t fall asleep unless she took me outside to look up at the sky first,” Michael said.
When he was in elementary school, Michael used writing assignments as an opportunity to report on atmospheric conditions. “What was the weatherman predicting for tomorrow? How long were the icicles hanging off my roof? How strong were the winds last night?”
Michael said that growing up in a waterfront home on the Neguntatogue Creek in Lindenhurst, New York — which gave him a front-row seat to view nature’s full force — influenced his decision to pursue atmospheric and oceanic sciences.
“On the coast, you often see precipitation transition from snow to sleet to rain, and then back the other way as cold air comes in at the end of a storm. You also get to see coastal flooding and experience more intense winds found near the ocean,” he said. “During the warm season, the sea breeze can trigger thunderstorms, and that happens to be the topic of my Honors College senior research project — what are the factors that allow some sea breeze boundaries to trigger thunderstorms?”
The Internet has made it easy for Michael to watch the weather unfold minute by minute on satellite and radar. As early as his freshman year in high school, he paid special attention to weather trends, which led to him posting forecasts on Facebook.
When Michael arrived at Stony Brook, he created SBUWeather, a Facebook page managed by the Meteorology Club, which provides forecasts to more than 700 students, staff and faculty on campus and to surrounding communities. Posting through social media helped provide more exposure for the Stony Brook Meteorology Club which enabled it to grow its current membership to 40 weather buffs. After he was elected president, he and his expanded club created a Web page on which they post forecasts.
Under Michael’s leadership, the club made its debut at the Involvement Fair, wearing T-shirts the members created. Feeding on a growing interest in the club, Michael began organizing field trips to regional conferences; the National Weather Service in Upton, New York; and local news stations to observe live forecasts. In 2013 “we visited ABC in New York City, and” in fall 2014 “we took a trip to News 12,” he said. To further increase its exposure, Michael initiated the club’s participation in Earthstock the past two years. The club competed in the 2014 Roth Regatta with a boat named “Hurricane Force.”
In 2014 Michael served an internship at the Upton National Weather Service facility, where he collected data using instruments called radiosondes, which are battery-powered devices carried into the atmosphere that transmit findings by radio to a ground receiver. He is also the proud recipient of the Timothy Magnussen Memorial Scholarship for undergraduate students majoring in atmospheric sciences. During the summer of 2014, he conducted research at Colorado State University, exploring the volume of hail in thunderstorms and associated lightning flash rates. These findings were presented at the American Meteorological Society annual meeting in Phoenix, AZ, in January 2015.
Michael helped coordinate a joint effort with the School of Journalism to provide broadcast experience to atmospheric and oceanic science majors.
“Even though the National Weather Service is my first choice to start my career path, every time I’m in a newsroom I get an overwhelming feeling of excitement, so I hope I get that opportunity to do that at some point in my life,” he said. Michael started his graduate studies at Penn State in the fall of 2015.
“The weather is something that affects everyone every day. It never stops changing, so I can never stop watching it,” he said.
From Michael Colbert ’15 Is Doing Something About the Weather by Glenn Jochum; photo by John Griffin
Danica Warns (MA, 2015)
According to Danica Warns, “the Marine Conservation and Policy program is a very unique and fast-track graduate program that helped launch my career in environmental conservation.” She appreciated the flexibility to select the classes she wanted to take and how she could “design (her) capstone project to match (her) career goals” that allowed her “to tailor the program to get the most out of my degree.” As she knew she was interested in a career in environmental outreach, Danica chose to take several courses in the Alda Center for Communicating Science. The classes “were so valuable and enhanced my communication skills greatly,” she says.
Danica highlights the benefits of the program:
If it weren’t for the flexibility of this program, it would have been difficult for me to meet my goals in such a short period of time. The strong background in current marine conservation issues and communication skills I learned put me in a competitive position for pursuing a career in environmental outreach.
She credits the MCP program for helping her get to her current position, working for the NYC Parks Department engaging volunteers in wetland restoration projects.
Laura Picariello (MA, 2012)
Laura Picariello, former MCP student, is busy pursuing a career in Louisiana with the Gulf United for Lasting Fisheries, part of the Audubon Nature Institute. As a Research Assistant working with a wide variety of audiences, she says the Marine Conservation and Policy program really helped her find her career.
“You deal with such a wide range of issues in the program,” says Picariello, “it’s not so specialized.”
The fact that the program focuses not only on science coursework, but communication, environmental law, and policy creates an environment where students can about a vast amount of topics in a short amount of time. This leaves them better prepared to find a career, maybe not even one they had expected.
“This opportunity came up. It was not the specific thing I was looking for,” state Picariello, “But I’m thrilled to be here. I’m loving where I’m at, working in the transition between fisheries and management.”
Picariello was traditionally trained as a musician, but found that she couldn’t live away from the ocean. She choose the Marine Conservation and Policy program in order to change her career pathway and improve her job satisfaction. What other advice does she have for current or prospective students wishing to do the same?
“We all had our ideas about where we wanted to go,” she says, “but don’t limit yourself in where you want to go. Being open leads you to interesting places.”
Morgan Gelinas (MS, 2011)
Morgan Gelinas (MS, 2011) studied ship wakes in the Venice Lagoon, Italy. Here, very large ships routinely navigate a deep dredged channel cut through a shallow lagoon. The wakes they create propagate over the adjacent shoals for long distances, resuspending sediment as they go. Morgan described these wakes as Bernoulli waves, or non-linear N-waves, using the same equations that govern the propagation of tsunamis over the deep-ocean basins (Gelinas, M, H. Bokuniewicz, J. Rapaglia, and K.M.M. Lwiza, 2013. Sediment Resuspension by Ship Wakes in the Venice Lagoon Journal of Coastal Research: Volume 29, Issue 1: 8-17. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.2112/JCOASTRES-D-11-00213.1).
She is now a scientist specializing in marine geology and hydrodynamic processes working for EA Engineering, Science and Technology, Inc. EA has offices from Guam to Maryland and Morgan is leading many of their field efforts. Her professional duties include such a diverse array of studies such as sediment testing, ocean permitting, marine bathymetric surveys, aquatic site characterizations, interpreting ecotoxicological and bioaccumulation/tissue testing and analysis. Morgan is currently working on a site characterization study in Duluth, MN in the St. Louis River/Lake Superior area, but she has been in most of the Great Lakes in the past two summers on EPA projects. She routinely pilots the boat for bathymetric work or coring all over in the Chesapeake Bay, Gulf of Mexico and greater NYC area.
Greg Marshall (MS, 1988)
Greg Marshall is the Executive Director and Producer of Remote Imaging at National Geographic Television and Film. In 1991, Greg began working with National Geographic Television and established the Special Projects Unit, where he developed the technology known as the Crittercam. The Crittercam is a revolutionary tool that has been used to study the behavior of almost 40 different marine and terrestrial species in their natural habitat.
He has received two Emmy Awards for the National Geographic specials Great White Sharks and Sea Monsters: Search for the Giant Squid. Greg also produced the film Tiger Shark and a 13-part series called Crittercam for National Geographic television.
He earned a bachelor’s degree in international relations from Georgetown University. Greg earned his master’s degree (1988) in marine environmental sciences from the Marine Sciences Research Center at Stony Brook University. His research focused on the factors influencing the burying behavior of juvenile queen conch, Strombus gigas.
Greg Marshall returned to SoMAS in 2017 to help us celebrate our 50th Anniversary as the Akira Okubo Distinguished Scholar.