BAHS graduate students present thesis proposals

BAHS masters students Caitlyn Collins, Keara Drummer,
 and Hannah Anderson
Three BAHS masters students presented their thesis proposals and answered questions on their experimental design  at the weekly BAHS seminar series on Friday, February 8. 

Caitlyn Collins' work will take her to Honduras and Greece as she compares the thermal tolerance of two species of sea urchins.Her proposal is entitled "Comparisons of the sea urchins Paracentrotus lividus and Eucidaris tribuloides:  What the Mediterianean and the Caribbean can teach us about the potential impacts of climate change." Dr. Thomas Klinger is her thesis adviser.

Keara Drummer's research will take her to museums in the United States and Canada to image trilobites. Keara aims to test the hypotheses of polyphenism and function for the extreme structures of the Devonian trilobite Walliserops. Keara's thesis adviser, Dr. Alan Gishlick, from the Department of Environmental, Geographical, and Geographical Sciences. 

Hannah Anderson's research investigates avian hosts of mosquito vectors for West Nile virus. Hannah will use molecular techniques to analyze mosquito samples collected by the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental protection. Her proposal is entitled "Ecological reservoirs, dead-ends, and dilution effects: Investigating avian hosts of mosquito vectors for West Nile Virus in Pennsylvania."  Dr. John Hranitz is her thesis adviser.


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