All posts by jdc12

The Inevitable Farewell, Goodbye Belize and TFBs


I can’t believe that the trip is over. Each day lasted forever, but all together time flew by in the blink of an eye. There is no way to completely sum up my experiences into just a few paragraphs, especially since this trip was so full of firsts, but the least I can do is answer the questions asked of me. The rest is… kind of intangible, swirled up in my brain like the keystone memory that it is going to become, and no blog could do it justice. 

The similarities between the reef (the rainforest of the sea) and the rainforest (the reef of the land) cannot be overlooked. Both ecosystems were so chocked full of diversity, each holding the title of the world’s majority stakeholders in biodiversity for their respective realms, there is no shortage of comparisons to be made. 

First, they are not separate in the first place. The calcium carbonate from the reefs finds itself in the soils of the rainforest, and the sediments of the rainforest find themselves in the reef. Without one or the other, neither would be as we know it. The soils of the rainforest are homes to millions of creatures and critters, and provide a space for the brilliant, expansive fauna to grow. Nutrients in both of these ecosystems are hot commodities, snatched up at first notice, leaving the reefs and trees to find a way to get the nutrients they need. And so, both have figured out ways to maneuver through this system, coral using symbioses, trees laterally growing buttress roots, epiphytes finding nutrients from debris in the canopy – they continue to thrive in the low nutrient areas. This means that they both have this huge amount of biodiversity in spite of the lacking nutrients. 

There are also creatures in both ecosystems that fill very specific niches that in their own ways push the ecosystems forward. From the symbiosis of the symbiodinium and coral to the plants and mycorrhizae, they have found ways to thrive in these competitive, complex ecosystems. 

I noticed that the impacts of climate change and human influence between the two protected areas, the Marine Protected Area and the forest preserve, seemed vastly different. I feel like forests are a lot more resilient than the reefs, able to withstand more stress without dying out, and able to bounce back with less resistance. There is simply so much diversity within the rainforest that when it is standing, one thing will fall and another will take its place. But on the reef, one thing falls, and it takes 5 things with it. 

I have to say, my favorite part of the course was snorkeling (in general). I love swimming and the water was so clear and watching the schools of fish swim by was so cool, it was an amazing experience. My least favorite part of the course was the hiking of the bird tower trail – which comes as a surprise to no one. I was terrified the whole way up and down, but hey, I pushed through and made it to the top (and back to the bottom). 

One thing that I found so surprising was the state of the coral reefs, even within the marine protected area. They were mottled with disease, and often parts were just broken to rubble. I knew that reefs have been getting hit hard in the past century with a bunch of stressors, but it was crazy to see that in person, and that will definitely stick with me. 

For my second thing, I never knew about lionfish and their prevalence as an invasive species – they were never even on my radar. Seeing Scott spear those fish was awesome in and of itself, but going forward into the future, I am now so much more aware of their presence and the need to rid the seas of them.

My last important thing is less tangible, but definitely something that I will remember in 5 years, or more honestly, for the rest of my life. That being the trip as a whole. Going on a field expedition to Belize, to the reef and the rainforest, as a scientist and researcher, meeting other POC scientists and researchers, being able to be immersed in the field, is something that I honestly probably would have never experienced if it weren’t for this trip. It showed me that I was capable of something to that level, to propose questions and make observations in a foreign place, and get taken seriously even as a student. This was only my second time out of the country, both of which occurred this summer – as an FGLI student, that alone had a learning curve. I will be forever grateful for the opportunity that this class allowed me to explore the field of biology and my own capabilities as a scientist, and that is certainly something that I can never forget. 

This course exceeded my expectations, brought me to another side of the world and took me out of my comfort zone in ways that showed me what I was capable of. Even though we had to wrap up early, I wouldn’t change anything about this trip for the world (except maybe the amount of bug bites I received – I am still so itchy!!)

Forest day 3: wANT to look at Ants? (06/18/22)

It’s already our second Saturday on this trip. We get back on Wednesday. Time is passing so fast. This morning for breakfast they changed it up with some ham and bread with the beans and eggs rather than bacon and tortillas. It wasn’t a coffee morning for me though.

After breakfast, Michael presented his lecture in tropical soils, during which we were all told to hydrate and drink our water. After the lecture, we did an experimental design for testing the abundance of arthropods on the forest floor vs the canopy, in nutrient rich conditions (pee tubes) vs nutrient poor conditions (water tubes). After planning, we then went to pee into tubes. The setup for this experiment is: at breast height on a tree, one water tube and one pee tube will be wired onto opposite sides of the tree, and then at the base of the tree, with the same orientation, the second water and pee tubes will be put flush into holes in the ground.

The horrific vials *shudder*

The tubes are going to be picked up tomorrow for collection and counting of arthropods. I didn’t actually go out with the group to put the tubes up since my ankle was hurting from twisting it yesterday, but my tubes were placed in the field by someone. While they were out, they apparently ran into a jumping viper (venomous) and an eyelash viper (also venoumous) that someone who has worked here for 12 years hadn’t even seen.

Eyelash Viper (Bothriechis schlegelii)
Tiny jumping viper (Atropoides picadoi)

The group returned at lunch, which is when I rejoined them. After lunch, we went exploring around the field station clearing on the search for small leaf cutter ant nests. Once we decided on one, Scott instructed us on how to dig next to it to find the fungus cavity. This nest was young, only about a year old, so it was quite small. We saw some seargent majors (large worker ants), but no soldiers (large defense ants) since the colony was so short. He dug out some of the fungus from in the cavity, and eventually pulled out the queen for viewing. She was huge!

In an attempt to excavate a larger colony (which ended up being abandoned), we found a Mexican burrowing toad!! They are super funny looking guys, with gelatinous bodies, splayed legs and almost no neck. I didn’t get to hold him since I was wearing bug spray, but he was such a rare and cool find. 

Mexican Burrowing Toad

Scott then excavated another colony, solely to show us what soldiers looked like. Some people picked them up, and even let them bite their shirts?? It’s a no from me dawg. 

 

I didn’t have much exposure to new trees today, but while we were in the clearing looking at the ant nests, we noticed some almost blackberry looking things on the ground, which I identified as some sort of cone, that were very light and had a woody consistency when cut into. These cones are the seeds of the bay cedar (Guazuma ulmifolia). I also believe I saw a small Billy Webb tree (Acosmium panamensis) along the edge of the clearing based on the shape and color of its fruits, although I could be wrong. 

We finished up the day with the lectures of the day before dinner, with free time or an optional night hike (which I did not choose to go on, again, because of my ankle).

today is also the day that I learned that I am covered in chigger bites on my arms from yesterday’s falls. They’re so itchy, I hate it.

That concludes day 11 – can’t believe we’re so far in. 




Forest day 2: Discovering a new phobia (06/17/22)

Oh boy has it been a day. A day it has been. We’ll start from the beginning, which was more chill, then move forwards throughout the day.

After the late night of bugs, I skipped the morning bird watch to get an extra hour of sleep (till a bright and early 6:30AM). After a breakfast of bacon, beans, tortillas, and fruit, we had a planning session for our 4 day camera trap experiment.

Our plan was to place 5 cameras each in 3 location types (trail, road, and jungle) to measure how often predators (small and large) and prey (small and large). We set off hiking once we were done planning, hiking down the “shortcut” trail, where we placed one camera, to get to the road. (This is all wearing rubber boots by the way). This went pretty smoothly: there was one steep area on the shortcut trail that I was sliding a bit since it’s the wet season, we got through to the road to place more cameras.

My personal goal for this day was to be on the look out for any trees with buttressed roots (which are pretty much super extended, almost platelike roots above the surface). These trees are usually larger than the others in the rainforest (the laterally extended roots often work as structural reinforcement since the trees they support are so tall, such as the ceiba tree), but since the species with these roots are so tall, it can be hard to determine the species of the tree without sight of the leaves, so identification was often impossible. 

Along the road I believe that I spotted a big-leaf mahogany (Swietenia macrophylla). Along the trails, I saw 9 trees with buttressed roots, most of which I was unable to identify. However, I do believe that one was a strangler fig (Ficus aurea) and one was a ceiba (Ceiba pentandra). Right next to the ceiba, I believe that I saw a chicle/sapodilla tree (Manilkara chicle), the tree used in making chewing gum, which had the very characteristic slash marks on its bark.

And right outside our bunks is a spanish cedar tree (Cedrela odorata), which is considered a vulnerable species!

After we placed 1 trail camera and 5 road cameras, it was time for lunch. We returned, and after lunch we were given some time to prepare for going back out.  Adrienne switched boots with me because I had some difficulty with sliding on the shortcut trail’s steep section, and we were expecting to be going up to the bird tower trail, which is known to be very steep. 

This is where the previously unknown phobia comes in. I don’t know why, I didn’t know that I had this fear, or what exactly the fear is, but as we were climbing these steep, muddy inclines, I freaked out. When we first got to the incline area, I looked up and automatically thought “nope” but I kept going anyways, and promptly slipped in the mud and fell. And then after that I kept pushing through, but I was terrified and literally having panic attacks between sections climbed, and fell once more. Adrienne stayed with me in the back and helped me make it through, which I greatly appreciated. We eventually finally made it up to the bird tower, which I climbed with no skepticism (I’m not afraid of heights, again I don’t know what this fear I discovered is).

On the way down, it was just as slick, but slightly easier, but I still fell again on the way down. We did encounter a cave that had some old Maya pottery inside, which was really cool! I twisted my ankle on a rock in there though, so that was fun. Today was just not my day. The rainforest does not like me. I am definitely team surf. 

 

Some cool things we saw in the forest though: 

The largest leaf cutter ant nest Scott has ever seen!

A tree fall on the path so we had to cut a new path through the forest!

Some red tree frog eggs!

2 turtles!

Maya pottery in cave!

We also saw some scarlet macaws in the Chiquibul forest!

The night presentations were by phoenix and rusty, about biogeography and amphibians.

Jumanji: Day 9 (forest day 1) 06/16/22

Welcomeeee to Jumanji!

Choose your character: trees, birds, bugs, or monkeys…

You chose… Trees! Good choice! Are you prepared? The game is about to begin!

Level One: The Maya Ruins of Caracol 

After a 3 hour drive down an unpaved, bumping and jolting road, you have arrived at your first destination: the found ruins of the classical period Maya People, Caracol.

Let your adventure begin!:

This morning started off at with an early 6:30AM breakfast, and getting on the road by 7:15AM. This was travel day 2 to the Chiquibul. Along the road in the Savannah plains, the Caribbean pine (Pinus caribaea) is still one of the most numerous trees on the side of the road, as well as some palms. Once we arrived at Caracol, we were given a debriefing of what the Caracol site was, its history, the history of the Maya people, and what our trek would be. Only 1% of the entire site of Caracol is excavated for viewing.

We climbed to the top of the temple/place, the largest structure still standing. There were So. Many. Stairs. I honestly don’t know how I made it up. But once on top of the temple, we were at the highest point that a man made structure reaches in Belize, which was crazy to me.  The view was breathtaking.

We also saw the temples used for astronomy, gauging the solstices by the alignment with the temples peaks. We also saw some tombs and a Steele.

At the ruins, we were shown two Ceiba (Ceiba pentandra), and explained the historical significance of the species. Historically, their bark was used for paper, but the fibers of the tree are so strong that they were used in WWII for parachutes, which resulted in the downing of many ceiba trees.

When standing in front of the astronomy temples, I correctly identified a gumbo limbo tree (Bursera simaruba), characterized by its green shiny bark covered in red papery peeling strips. Also known as the tourist tree since it’s always red and peeling. Funnily, around the gumbo limbo was a strangler fig tree (Ficus aurea), which had completely grown around the spot that the gumbo limbo was planted, completely overtaking it. Both of these trees are known to be of the taller variety, but the gumbo limbo was dropping over to get sun from beneath the canopy of the strangler fig. We also saw and were told about the horse balls tree (Tabernaemontana donnell-smithii), which has round fruit that produce a latex-glue like substance.

After our tour, we ate lunch curtesy of our tour guides, Leo and Miguel. Leo was so informative, and even worked on excavation at the site from 1995-1998. 

After lunch, we finally made it to Las Cuevas Research Station in the evening. We caught up on lectures, had dinner, and then continued with the day’s lectures.

Our room was full of bugs, and we had to tape the screen flush to stop them from coming in. We don’t even know if we got them all out, but we eventually had to sleep. And that are our day, day one in the Chiquibul forest!

If not friend, why cat purr? (Day 8, travel day 2)

Note: I will start including more taxon information about trees tomorrow! They’re certainly everywhere!!

Today we said farewell to Glover’s reef and Middle Caye, waving sayonara to our reef taxon for the rest of the trip. Bye mollusks! We had our last breakfast on island, some beans, sausage (honestly it may have been closer to a hot dog) and a tortilla and a mango. Sadly, I forgot to ask what type of mangos the baby mangos were so I could purchase them in the future. 

After breakfast, we loaded our luggage back into the big boat that we came to the island on, and took a group photo with our water safety officers. It was here that we said goodbye to Ruth and Adrian, as only Cladius was accompanying us to Belize City. Dramamined up and ready to go, we boarded the boat to leave. But! One of the engines wasn’t working somehow, so two of the crew had to wack around in the engine department until they got it started, and we were off!

With a departure around 8:30, we arrived in the marina of Belize City around 12:40, ~4 hours later. I napped on the boat on the way there, as today was not a day about taxa but about travel. 

Once at the dock, we unloaded everything and walked to the place where we started on the dock 7 days ago. We then loaded everything into 2 white vans that hold 10 people each.

After this, we had lunch at Calypso, the restaurant on the marina we came in on. I had the beef fajitas, but after seeing what everyone else got, I wished I had ordered pasta instead. They had fresh fruit juice, so I tried cantaloupe juice for the first time, and it was delicious and refreshing.

 

After leaving Calypso, we went to a local supermarket/pharmacy (pretty much a small version of H‑E‑B), where we stocked up on snacks and refilled supplies like bug spray and Tylenol.  

After checkout, we headed to the Tropical education center near the Belize zoo, just outside of Belize City, where we would be staying the night. After getting settled into 2 person cabanas, we listened to a talk by Borris Aravalo about his research on the endangered north subspecies of the scarlet macaw and conservation. 

Dinner was next, a traditional Belizean meal much like something that we ate at Glover’s. Then, the coolest part of the day: we got to have a night tour of the Belize zoo to see the nocturnal animals!

Even the 1 mile ride to the zoo was amazing, sitting in the back of a truck looking at the oh so dark night sky with wind blowing past us. But once we were there, it was awesome to see the creatures that many don’t get to see at the zoo because they aren’t usually out in the daytime (During Normal zoo hours).  (See the pic of the Big Dipper I captured)

We saw coatimundis and 3 species of owl, got to feed a white tailed deer a carrot, and got to feed a tapir, the national animal of Belize, a carrot as well. Tapirs are so much larger than I thought they were going to be, like a baby elephant or a super large dog. We also got to see 4 species of cat! 2 big, 2 “small” cats (but one of them (the puma) was a big cat classified as a small cat because of it’s ability to purr!) If it purrs, how is it not a friend??

On the topic of trees, the most recognizable tree that I saw the most of today was the Caribbean pine,  Pinus caribaea. They’re characterized by very tall (~150 or greater) trunks with no branches or leaves until you reach the top, with needle like leaves.

At the tropical education center, we also saw a black poison wood, which was not a tree I knew I needed to be aware of! It’s important not to touch these.

And finally, at the zoo we saw a ceiba tree (Ceiba pentandra) which is one of the largest species of tree in the area!

Overall awesome place to stay!





The Last Day at Glovers (Day 7)- Ending with a Lionfish ceviche “feast”

Caribbean reef squidToday was our last day on the island :,( we did our last snorkel this morning, and tomorrow we head back to the mainland for the second half of our expedition. Each day feels like many, but then the week passed in the blink of an eye.

At 8:00AM, after breakfast, we suited up for the last time in our snorkel gear to head out on a mission to collect our last data point in the ongoing TFB research question: what is the association between live coral cover and the abundance of sea urchins on patch reefs within and outside of the Marine Protected Area of Glovers Reef Atoll?

We headed to the second non-MPA patch reef for our last transect/quadrat data collection. Our last reef science hurrah. Scott caught one more lionfish (making 3 in total of the invasive species soon to be ceviche). After our data collection was done, we went to one more MPA reef within the atoll for one last free snorkel. While the wind and waves were intense, it was a nice experience. I came across a handful more queen conchs (Strombus gigas), one milk conch (Strombus stratus), and one Amber penshell (Pinnea carnea). Everyone but me it seems got to see one or multiple Caribbean reef squids (Sepioteuthis sepioidea).

Caribbean reef squid

We made a poster with our analyzed data (see picture), and then after lunch, I presented my taxon lecture on mollusks (on the last day, after we’d seen all the mollusks we could have possibly seen). For dinner, they had fried conch, meaning I got to taste my taxon! It tasted like crab cakes ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Fried conch

After dinner, we dissected the 3 lion fish we had collected through the week, identifying the sex, weight, length, and last meal. (Ours was named appetizer)! And then Scott filleted the fish and we ate them as ceviche. It was my first time trying ceviche, and it honestly just tasted like lime. Would eat again!

This time on the island was honestly remarkable, and I can’t wait for the rainforest half of the trip (although I can’t see how it could be better than this)

 

A delayed post- the forereef: 1, Jazmine: -100

Spoiler alert: no mollusks were found this day (Monday June 13, 2022).

 

As is indicative of me posting this a whole day later, yesterday had me out for the count. I became over confident, so trusting in myself and a  single Dramamine tablet’s ability to keep me safe. I was oh so incorrect.

At 7:00AM, we showed up to the dining hall for breakfast, as usual. It was a windy night, followed by a windy morning. We were all aware of this, but this was our last chance: we had to make it to the fore-reef that day, or else we weren’t going to. So I popped a Dramamine, and hoped for the best, as did the rest of the crew.

Come 8:00AM, we were geared up and hopping on the boat to head for a break in the reef crest, going to the full wave action of the ocean, whose energy wouldn’t be broken by an atoll of coral. The change was immediately noticeable when we passed the crest, both in wave size and in the state of my body’s well-being. As the sea began to churn with boat sized waves, so did my stomach. No turning back now.

We continued onward to a spot at which coral should be visible at the ocean floor, but that would be significantly deeper than anything we’ve experienced so far. We ventured to the drop off point, the place where the bottom dropped from 60 ft to over a hundred. With half of the team already feeling seasick, we hopped into the water to begin our activity, to experience the fore reef.

 

And I must say, it was magnificently stunning, deep blue water at a depth that made the whole world feel small, with comb jellies swimming right below us en mass, and a giant sea turtle resting at the bottom of the sea. It was an experience like no other, and I wish that the sea had been calmer or my body better acclimated so I could enjoy it to its full degree.

comb jellies! (picture courtesy of Phoenix)

But alas, each time I popped my head above water, my entire being would return to the fact that the sea is not my friend, and that the world was in fact churning. As quickly as we got there, we loaded back into the boat, a little worse for the wear, but having experienced something awesome.

When we returned to our island, I laid on the dock for an hour, simply trying to be able to stand without having the overwhelming feeling of needing to vomit. The sea bested me. It won. When I thought I was better, I went onward to watch the day’s lectures and then to lunch with the rest of the team. This is when I started to realize that it wasn’t done with me yet, the sea sickness. No, it had me in its grips. Even after 2 extra strength Tylenol during the lectures, I had to stop chewing at lunch because my body and my head rejected it: the headache was beginning. By the time we got to the planning stage of our next activity, a beach cleanup effort with an added scientific approach question, I couldn’t lift my head without it hurting, nor wear my glasses, and the world was so bright, even when I borrowed sunglasses. A migraine had hit. I felt so bad abandoning my team, but the professors understood and told me to go and lay down, which I truly needed.

I returned at dinner, still not feeling 100%, but at least able to walk around and be there. I didn’t return to my full capacity until the next morning, after a full night’s sleep ushered along by 2 Dramamine. I don’t know whether to say I learned my lesson, or to say I’d still do it again, just better prepared next time. I guess time will tell

During my time of rest, the rest of the TFBs were so productive and did so good: they collected more than 60kg of trash off the beach’s of the Middle Caye (our island), over 80% of which was burnable on site. They also created a poster with this data (see picture), which they presented to the professors. So proud!

our poster

A productive morning

As the days progress, the number of coffee mugs present at breakfast continues to increase. Today was Sunday, reef day 4, and it was packed full of activities. Breakfast was good as always, and I was among the people with a mug this morning, although it was tea, not coffee (not too much of a instant coffee fan). But! The mangos were back! We love the mangos! At breakfast, we were warned to take Dramamine to prepare for the boat rides if we get motion sick, so I took one asap, and I assume it worked because I didn’t end up feeding the fishes.

We took a boat out to a patch reef within the marine protected area at 8:00 AM, and it was gorgeous. I literally cannot describe the color of blue that the water is, but it’s breathtaking.  At the reef, we continued our survey from yesterday, using a transect tape and a quadrat to measure live coral cover vs dead coral cover, and also collected and measured urchins again. I don’t understand how these people spot these urchins so easily, I only found one today and I couldn’t even get it off the rock it was attached to.  We also caught another lion fish today!(We saw 5 throughout the day, but only that one was caught). This was definitely the best reef site we’ve surveyed so far. It was so lush with fish and large coral colonies, you could definitely tell the difference between it and the non-protected reef.   Once we were done at that site, we moved on to another patch reef within the MPA, but it was significantly more shallow than the previous one, which made everything harder as wind and waves tried to push us over. That shallower reef was covered to a great degree in coral rubble, with only small sections of live coral. At both locations though, there was an immense amount of brown algae coverage/outbreak. It seemed like it was on everything. The second reef also was generally smaller, with a steep sloping drop of about 20 feet around the edges of the reef.

Today’s lectures were about green algae, crustaceans, and my lecture on coral reefs and climate change. They were moved up to 1:00pm (right after lunch) to make room for some guest speakers from the Belize Fisheries Service. As a speech kid, I felt like my presentation came through as impassioned, which I’d say is a success, and I think my delivery was on time with room for questions so that’s good too! All before 2pm!

after the presentations, we had free time with the option to partake in an optional free snorkel. While this trip is exhausting, when else will I have these opportunities to go snorkeling and see awesome creatures? So I went! During the free snorkel, I found 2 more species of mollusk that I had yet to see: an amber pen shell and a horse conch! (Still no picture, my camera is still broken sorry y’all!) I also came across a bunch more milk conchs and queen conchs in that area as well.

after that I took a quick shower, went to dinner, and then it was time for the guest speaker! As well as the fisheries guy, Raphael, one of the posted Belize Coast Guard men also talked to us about their goings on. The Glovers Reef Atoll is a world heritage site by the way!

overall, a productive day! I feel satisfied by it! Hopefully tomorrow we can go out to the fore reef, and maybe at some point we can actually get to do the night snorkel. We’ll see! I’ll update you on that tomorrow! See you then!

Day 4 in the (mixed) bag

(EDIT:REVISED AGAIN, it’s back up and running)(EDIT as I’m in the process of writing this, the power tripped again and so we don’t have lights or fans right now either 😢)

As my title punn-ily states, today was a mixed bag. No pictures on this blog post because my camera took on water and killed the screen, and I’ve yet to see if any of my pictures from the past 4 days can be recovered from the SD card. And I had some really good pictures on there too 🙁

 

We were supposed to go to the fore reef this morning, but it was too windy to go out there safely, so that got postponed to another day (tbd, hopefully tomorrow morning). Our night snorkel has also been delayed because of it. The wind, despite its faults though, has made sleeping in the AC-less bunks so much more tolerable, because, you know, airflow! (I’m much too spoiled to air conditioning, I’m realizing). But today really was a beautiful day, perfect weather, and the water was stunning teal!

 

Our first activity was a brainstorming session to come up with our next experimental design proposal. After that we ventured out for an hour of specimen collection in the shallows behind the kitchen. We found some really cool little creatures, including a mantis shrimp (which, did you know, has 16 cones in its eyes, meaning it can probably see things and colors that we can’t even imagine), some crabs, some urchins, and in my taxon, a few queen conchs and a milk conch (which was a first for me so far!). Here’s the mixed bag part: awesome creatures, but the water smelled like poop. Straight fish manure.🤢 I was so happy to get rinsed off once we got back.

The second part of the day is where the interesting snorkeling takes place! We took a boat off of the Marine Protected Area to the West reef to execute the first part of our experimental design, data collection with transects on the reef, which was certainly interesting. We were trying to answer the question of what is the correlation of sea urchin presence and percentage of live and dead coral, and how does that change between the MPA and non-protected areas.

We don’t have a conclusion yet, but we did do the first part of data collection there. That non-MPA section was honestly really sad, with rampant disease, lots of coral rubble, and shallow waters, and my partner and I had to omit 2 of our planned measurement sites due to 1. Being unable to take the measures without brushing against fire coral, which I accidentally touched with my thigh, and 2. Our quadrat is completely broken . We also collected some sea urchins to measure and speciate them once we got back.

 

We then went onwards to a MPA reef, which was so much deeper and nice and much more alive. Scott speared one of the invasive lion fish. This part of the trip was amazing! I got to dive some in the beautiful water!

 

See what I mean by mixed bag? That describes today well.  Of course, we still had our daily lectures to expect, which I made it through tho!

 

 

Day 3: A walk in the graveyard

Today was day 3, and it’s crazy that we still have 11 days left on this journey. Each day has felt like 3 (not in a bad way though).

 

This mornings lunch was my favorite so far: some beans, bread, sausage, and spam (and some watermelon). It reminded me of something my mom would make back home, Simple but Delicious. It does seem like we’re running out of fruit though. The first couple of days, there were some delicious mangos, but alas, all of those are gone now.

 

After breakfast, we did an experimental design on land, which we then executed and collected data for in order to get used to using the transect tapes and quadrats. Then as a group, we designed an experiment for the water (determining the density of penicillus algae as we moved away from shore). This experiment allowed us to work with these tools in the water for the first time, and to work together as a team to develop and execute a scientific question. The experiment went well, but our hypothesis was dead wrong ☠️

 

During that snorkel, we also saw a starfish, a sea urchin, and a handful of mollusks! (Including a very large queen conch! 🐚)

 

We then worked together to make a scientific poster illustrating our experimental design and results, which we presented to Scott and Adrienne once we were finished.

 

Lunch was a chicken burger and fries. After lunch we did another land activity: we adventured to the coral graveyard 🪦🪸! Just a hop, skip, and jump away from our bunks lies a collection of calcified coral corpses like no other. They’re so well preserved in their fossilized form that we could identify the species from the long dead skeleton corallites. We verbally identified 11 species using ID cards and books.

 

We had one lecture before dinner(chicken, rice, and mashed potatoes, with the other 3 coming after dinner. The night snorkel was supposed to be tonight, but the winds have picked up too much to go out safely, so we’re staying in!

 

Fun extra excerpt about the day: Caio and Nyala became pros at cracking open coconuts and provided coconuts to your hearts galore for the whole group. Great kids