UNCW Graduate School has announced the winners of the Fall Three Minute Thesis (3MT) competition. Thirteen students competed in the competition held on Nov. 16 during the Student Research and Creativity Showcase.
By winning the competition at UNCW, the students will be able to compete at the regional level. Regional winners move on to the national level, and those who win at the national level will earn a spot in the international competitions hosted by the University of Queensland Australia. The 3MT is an international competition that began in 2008 to help graduate students learn to talk succinctly about their research to a non-specialist audience. This competition is held at over 900 universities in more than 85 countries worldwide.
This year's university-level winners are:
Amy Grogan, a Ph.D. candidate in the biology and marine biology department, placed first. Her dissertation research examines various water pollutants, focusing on harmful algal bloom biology and ecology. She has taught cellular biology and marine biology labs at UNCW.
Prince Akabawie Akonde, a second-year graduate student under the mentorship of the MACRL lab and Dr Ai Ning Loh, placed second. His research explores the sources of arsenic in groundwater, porewater and surface water in the Matagorda – Galveston Bay area in Texas. Prince graduated from the University of Ghana, Legon with a B.S. in Earth Science.
Video Presentation: Sources of Arsenic in Groundwater, Porewater and Surface Waters in Matagorda-Galveston Bay Watershed in Texas
Lauren Singleton, a second-year graduate student completing her master's thesis under the mentorship of Dr. Rachel Kohman, was named a crowd favorite. Her thesis project investigates the relationships among alcohol use and inflammation through rodent models of alcohol consumption and immune activation. Her educational and professional goals center on improving functional outcomes for those with inflammatory-associated disorders
Video Presentation: Promotion of Voluntary Alcohol Consumption Through an Inflammatory Challenge
Awards for the Three-Minute Thesis Competition were provided by the Dr. Ralph W. Brauer Fellowship, which was created through the estate of Dr. Brauer, a long-tenured professor at UNCW. It is intended to provide financial support to one or more graduate students to assist with tuition and fees, books, publications, or research travel as determined by the dean of the graduate school.
A new Bachelor of Science in Biochemistry will soon be offered in the College of Science and Engineering at the University of North Carolina Wilmington, tentatively beginning in the fall of 2024.
The degree, which was approved by the University of North Carolina Board of Governors this month, will help prepare students to enter a career in chemical engineering, the medical field, as well as provide a foundation for students seeking advanced degrees in health-related programs. (more...)
During Alison Loftis’s final year as a UNCW undergraduate, she was tuning into her virtual marine mammal biology course when marine mammal stranding research caught her eye. Little did she know that in two short years, she would be back at her alma mater, heading a position as Assistant Stranding Coordinator of the University of North Carolina Wilmington's (UNCW) Marine Mammal Stranding Program.
Loftis graduated from UNCW in 2021 with a Bachelor of Science in Marine Biology and a Bachelor of Arts in Music. Upon graduation, she utilized her recently piqued interest in the marine mammal stranding field to pursue two consecutive internships with hopes to gain hands-on experience in the field. As a result, Loftis's work with the Clearwater Marine Aquarium Rescue Team and the International Fund for Animal Welfare Marine Mammal Rescue and Research team exposed her to many stranding response experiences, preparing her for a full-time position in the field.
When asked what led her back to UNCW to continue her career in marine mammal stranding research, Loftis highlighted the 28-year history of the university's Marine Mammal Stranding Program (MMSP). Initially created and led by Dr. Ann Pabst and Mr. William McLellan, the program has made a shift into new leadership.
"I was very excited to potentially be part of a program with such a history and reputation as the UNCW MMSP. As Dr. Pabst and Mr. William McLellan transition to retirement and entrust program leadership to a new set of leaders, I hope to learn all that I can from their foundation and help continue the important work of the MMSP," said Loftis.
UNCW MMSP serves as a part of the National Ocean and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) Marine Mammal Health and Stranding Response Program, working in a network of regional stranding response teams to protect NC's marine mammal community. Now led by director Dr. Michael Tift and stranding coordinator Dr. Tiffany Keenan of UNCW's Department of Biology and Marine Biology, the university's MMSP coordinates responses to sick, injured, distressed, or deceased marine mammals stranded on our local beaches.
Through this role, not only does the program save marine mammal lives, but staff and student volunteers can conduct and participate in valuable research that can better help humans understand the lives and behaviors, and overall ecology of these creatures.
"The stranding program here at UNCW is unique in that it is directly tied to a university. This creates so many opportunities to be directly involved in research projects with our stranding cases and learn about the health and life history of species in our area, which is vital for their protection and conservation," said Loftis when discussing what she hopes to learn at MMSP.
In early March of 2023, Loftis began her role as Assistant Stranding Coordinator of UNCW MMSP and has already hit the ground running. Taking on many different roles, her duties range from stranding response and necropsy, to operating the program's 24/7 stranding hotline and ensuring the readiness of response equipment and lab facilities, to developing training events for the 200+ student volunteers, along with facilitating outreach within the community. Loftis also manages the program's social media accounts to keep followers up to date with news and events held by the program.
“Though I did not expect to be back at UNCW in a professional capacity so soon, I have absolutely enjoyed my time back here so far, and I am excited to continue to learn and grow in this position,” said Loftis.
- Arden Lumpkin
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