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This page created and maintained by
Susan Allen-Gil
and Nancy Pierce.
Last updated on April 2004 |
Sources of organochlorine
contamination in inland subsistence fisheries of northern Alaska:
atmospheric vs. amphidromous
inputs
Graduate
Student: John Seigle
 |
John
Seigle
John is a graduate
student in the Department of Fisheries and Wildlife at Oregon State University.
His masters research focuses on the use of otolith microchemistry (Sr/Ca
ratios) to track movements of least cisco between marine and freshwater
environments on the Coastal Plain. Prior to his graduate work, John
worked with Dr. John Mark Dean in the Marine Science Deptartment of the
Univeristy of South Carolina conducting fisheries age and growth studies,
and worked on aquaculture projects in Gabon, West Africa with the Peace
Corps. |
Undergraduate
Students: Jess Hawley,
Rob Jefferiss, Michelle Niescierenko,Jon Stercho
 |
Jess
Hawley
Jess worked as a field assistant for the summer 2000 field season while
she was an undergraduate student in Biology at Ithaca College. After graduating
in 2001, Jess moved to Boston where she works for EBI, an environmental
consulting firm. |
|
Rob
Jefferiss
Rob served as a field assistant for the summer 2000 field season while
he was an undergraduate student in Environmental Studies at Ithaca College.
After graduating in 2001, Rob taught snowboarding in Park City Utah, and
is now teaching sailing for Outward Bound in Maine. |
|
Michelle
Niescierenko
Michelle worked as a field assistant for the summer 2001 field season
while she was an undergraduate student in Biology at Ithaca College. Michelle
graduated with Honors in June 2002, and plans to attend medical school
at the University of Buffalo (NY) this fall. |
|
Jon
Stercho
Jon worked as a field assistant for the summer 2001 field season while
he was an undergraduate student in Biology at Ithaca College. Jon graduated
in June 2002, and is busy helping with his father's fly fishing business
and raising his new puppy before he applies to graduate school, perhaps
in environmental toxicology. |
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