Storytellers of STEMM artwork

Storytellers of STEMM

159 episodes - English - Latest episode: about 2 years ago - ★★★★★ - 4 ratings

Everyone has a story, and these are the stories of the people in STEMM - their successes, career paths, research, field work, struggles, and everything in between. Each episode features a different storyteller! We're still here and meeting amazing people, and episodes will come out periodically so stay tuned!

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Episodes

#144 - Louise Carroll: Meteorology

June 18, 2022 02:51 - 59 minutes - 55.1 MB

Today's storyteller is Louise Carroll! Louise is an operational meteorologist based in Australia and also a fellow member of the Homeward Bound program. I was really excited to meet Louise and hear about her work as meteorologist, and the far flung places where her work has taken her. She's worked in Antarctica multiple times, and on remote islands like Willis Island in the Coral Sea off the coast of Australia. I had such fun talking to Louise so I hope you enjoy! --- You can find Rachel V...

#143 - Courtney Robichaud: Freshwater Wetlands & Phragmites australis

February 08, 2022 01:09 - 59 minutes - 55 MB

Today's storyteller is Dr Courtney Robichaud! Courtney is a wetlands scientist who has primarily researched Phragmites australis - which is a super tall colony forming invasive freshwater plant species. And when I say tall, it's regularly 10-15 feet tall. And Phragmites (aka phrag or roseau) is very good at invading locations and outcompeting native species. It forms these dense colonies which also doesn't really allow for a diverse suite of species to grow in the same area. I was so excited...

#142 - Jonathon Valente: Avian Ecology & Research

January 16, 2022 03:25 - 1 hour - 79.6 MB

Today's storyteller is Dr Jonathon Valente! Jonathon is a longtime dear friend of mine who does all kinds of interesting bird and wildlife research and so I'm excited to share this conversation with you! We first met at Louisiana State University (LSU) back in I think like 2007, when I was finishing up my bachelor's degree and he was starting his master's degree. I then joined the same research lab to begin my master's degree right after my undergrad graduation, so we were lab mates for a fe...

#141 - Clay Tucker: Tree Rings and Hurricanes

November 17, 2021 00:34 - 1 hour - 58.1 MB

Today's storyteller is Dr Clay Tucker! Clay is a tree ring scientist, also known as a dendrochronologist, and his specialty is related to hurricanes and climate change. I could have called this episode "Dendrochronology" but probably most people have no idea what that would mean and I didn't want to detract from this fabulous episode!! So trees grow and add rings every year, so by taking a small core of the tree you get a visual representation of that tree's life, essentially. And you can se...

#140 - Jhénelle Williams: Nuclear Applications in Environmental Sciences

November 14, 2021 14:41 - 57 minutes - 52.9 MB

Today's storyteller is Jhénelle Williams! Jhénelle is an ocean engineer from Jamaica using nuclear technology to do ocean and environmental science research. If you're wondering how that works and what that even means, don't worry that's the very first thing we talk about! We talk about the types of research they do, how they use nuclear techniques to further their knowledge. They use this technology to research mangroves, sediment, microplastics, sargassum, and air quality research. I found...

#139 - Brittaney Spruill: Architecture

November 09, 2021 03:43 - 1 hour - 92.1 MB

Today's storyteller is Brittaney Spruill! Britt is friend and neighbor and architect and today we talk about pretty much everything! ALSO, surprise because Cedric Johnson is back to guest host this time! If you missed Cedric's episode, it's #128. So listen to that one too if you missed it. Anyway back to this episode! Britt is here today to talk about why she chose architecture (or did it choose her?), what she likes about it, about the types of projects she's worked on, what she'd be doing ...

#138 - Jarrod McKenna: The Egyptian Spiny Mouse and Reproductive Biology

October 14, 2021 23:51 - 55 minutes - 51.3 MB

Today's storyteller is Dr Jarrod McKenna! Jarrod is a reproductive biologist at Monash University in Australia and today we talk about the Egyptian spiny mouse and studying reproductive biology. The Egyptian spiny mouse is a rare example of menstruation in mammals, especially a small prey sized mammal, as opposed to large mammals with few  to no actual predators (such humans and primates). In the lab they can use this mouse as a test subject of sorts or a surrogate for studying human reprodu...

#137 - Lisa Caprelli: Unicorn Jazz and Educational Outreach

September 28, 2021 22:43 - 50 minutes - 46.7 MB

Today's storyteller is Lisa Caprelli! She is a children's book author and the creator of the Unicorn Jazz book series, which also launched an Amazon show called The Thing I Do. Today Lisa and I talk about the things that people do, social and emotional intelligence, the importance of people sharing what they do to a young audience, and how her psychology background helps her be a writer and leader. This isn't really a typical STEMM episode BUT I always have said I want to talk to anyone who ...

#136 - Logan Kline: Drones and Nesting Seabirds

September 22, 2021 02:16 - 1 hour - 55.8 MB

Today's storyteller is Logan Kline! Logan is a master's student at the University of Maine studying nesting birds using drones! She is using drones to find nests of colonial nesting seabirds on islands in Maine, and training AI to interpret the images. It's really just so cool! I studied shorebirds for my master's, and have a special place in my bird loving heart for these birds, and that's how I originally started following Logan on Twitter. And add in the amazingly cool drone technology tha...

#135 - Cynthia Awruch: Shark Physiology, Reproduction, and Conservation

September 14, 2021 21:33 - 57 minutes - 53.2 MB

Today's storyteller is Dr Cynthia Awruch! Cynthia is a marine biologist studying sharks of Argentina and Tasmania. She's researching shark physiology and reproduction, how physiology helps conservation, and how marine contaminants negatively impact shark reproduction. Today we talk all about her research, and dive into how physiology does impact shark conservation, which I found very interesting. They figured out a way to use hormones (via blood samples) to understand reproduction and stress...

#134 - Bharathi Boppana: Computational Modeling and a Conversation

September 08, 2021 01:10 - 58 minutes - 54.6 MB

Today's storyteller is Dr Bharathi Boppana! Bharathi is a Research Scientist at the Institute of High Performance Computing in Singapore. Today we talk about her work there using computational simulations to model wind and pollution in urban areas. Bharathi's journey is so interesting - her background is in engineering, and her PhD is in applied mathematics - and her journey takes her to Singapore where she is now. We talk fluid dynamics, what modeling is, how modeling works, computer progra...

#133 - Karen Joyce: Drones and Geospatial Science

August 24, 2021 21:00 - 53 minutes - 49.9 MB

Today's storyteller is Dr Karen Joyce! Karen is a geospatial scientist, and today we talk all about drones, remote sensing, geography, and everything in between! Karen wears a lot of hats - she's a lecturer at James Cook University in Australia, she's the cofounder and education director of She Maps (which we'll talk about), and she also runs the drone data repository GeoNadir (which we didn't even get to in this conversation!). She Maps is really brilliant and aiming at diversifying STEM us...

#132 - Paula Silva: Water Resources Engineering & Management

August 18, 2021 00:22 - 51 minutes - 47.5 MB

Today's storyteller is Paula Silva! Paula is a water resources engineer at a large international consulting firm. If you're like me, when you think water management, you either think of something like in urban areas (for me, that would be the New Orleans Sewerage & Water Board, in particular), or in more natural environments (for me, Mississippi River flows). Water is vital to a lot of things and so I'm excited to share this conversation with y'all. So Paula is here today to talk about what ...

#131 - Claire Cannon: Veterinary Oncology

August 03, 2021 22:00 - 58 minutes - 54.2 MB

Today's storyteller is Dr Claire Cannon! Claire is a veterinary oncologist based in Melbourne Australia. Today we talk all about cancer in pets, particularly dogs and cats, and I learned so much about the field, research, and types of cancers that impact our pets. Also, did you know that elephants don't get cancer!? Which is awesome and mind boggling, the world is so cool. Okay so we talk about the balance of clinical visits and teaching, about mental health in the veterinary world, about sc...

#130 - Marga L Rivas: Marine Ecology

July 27, 2021 22:31 - 48 minutes - 45.3 MB

Today's storyteller is Dr Marga L Rivas! Marga is a marine ecologist based at the University of Almeria in Spain. She's done a lot of work with sea turtles, marine conservation, ocean plastics, remote sensing, and sometimes all these aspects combined. It's all really interesting work so check it out! Marga is also part of Homeward Bound 5 with me, and so it was nice to get to know her better on a one on one basis. So in addition to all the cool marine work we talk about we also talk about th...

#129 - Yona Nebel-Jacobsen: Geochemistry

July 21, 2021 01:24 - 55 minutes - 51.3 MB

Today's storyteller is Dr Yona Nebel-Jacobsen! Yona is a geochemist based in Melbourne Australia, she works with isotopes, and she teaches me so much cool geology straight away. In this episode we talk about what a geochemist does, if it was the "geo" or the "chem" part that appealed to her, the nonlinear twisty path she took to her current position, and about all things in between. Yona is also part of Homeward Bound in the 4th cohort (I'm in the 5th) and so we talk a bit about our experien...

#128 - Cedric Johnson: Architecture

July 07, 2021 00:49 - 1 hour - 62.9 MB

Today's storyteller is Cedric Johnson! Cedric is very good friend of mine, who is an architect, loves sports, and has the most contagious laughter I've ever heard. I've known Cedric for a long time but I met him because of kickball (yay sports) and our mutual good friend Brittaney Spruill, so I enlisted Britt to guest host with me in this episode!! Britt is also an architect so in this episode we ask Cedric questions about why he chose architecture, about his favorite project and his dream pr...

#127 - Georget Oraha: Mussels and Biology Education

June 30, 2021 00:42 - 52 minutes - 48.3 MB

Today's storyteller is Georget Oraha! Georget is a graduate student at Cal State Fullerton, studying tidal influences on mussels in California. We start out talking about her research and how all that went, especially with how the pandemic has impacted her fieldwork and also her study areas. So we talk about all that, but we also have a really good conversation about finding community in a research lab/field team, which can be rare to find but is so amazing when it all clicks together. Georg...

#126 - Scott Davidson: Peatlands Research

June 22, 2021 23:28 - 54 minutes - 50.3 MB

Today's storyteller is Dr Scott Davidson! Scott is a peat researcher and this podcast episode is all about peat! Peat is, very generally, partially decayed organic matter, and forms the base for ecosystems like peatlands, bogs, and more. Scott's work is focused on how disturbance and climate change will impact resilience of wetland systems, particularly peat lands! Peatlands are a type of wetland, and y'all know I love wetlands and so I had a lot of fun talking about all of this with Scott. ...

#125 - Anna Frebel: Astronomy & Stellar Archaeology

June 16, 2021 00:39 - 55 minutes - 51.5 MB

Today's storyteller is Dr Anna Frebel! Anna is an astronomer and stellar archaeologist, working as a professor and researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Her work focuses on finding the oldest stars in the universe, and y'all this is some really mind blowing work she's doing. In this episode we learn about metal poor stars, what that means, how one can (roughly) tell the age of a star, what kind of information we learn from old stars, how one navigates in outer space,...

#124 - Aedín McAleer: Marine Science & Ocean Acidification

June 08, 2021 20:00 - 49 minutes - 46.2 MB

Today's storyteller is Aedín McAleer! Aedín currently works on the VOCAB project with NUI Galway in Ireland. She's also concurrently doing her master's studying ocean acidification! So today we talk about her work as a research assistant and master's student doing long term monitoring research with ocean acidification and climate change. We talk about how Aedín got interested in marine science, what she wants to do in the future after her master's work is finished, and about the equipment th...

#123 - Joanna Sumner: Herpetology & Managing Genetic Resources

June 01, 2021 21:00 - 58 minutes - 54.4 MB

Today's storyteller is Dr Joanna Sumner! She is the Manager of Genetic Resources at Museums Victoria in Melbourne, Australia. She's also a self described "flick falling herpetologist" and tune in because asking what that means was my very first question in this episode! Today we talk about the work she does, what that work even is, the kind of collections they have, about bio banks, and I ask too many questions about liquid nitrogen because I'm a nerd. I was really interested to hear about t...

#122 - Isobel Romero-Shaw: Gravitational Waves

May 25, 2021 16:00 - 1 hour - 57.6 MB

Today's storyteller is Isobel Romero-Shaw! Isobel is a PhD student at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia. She studies gravitational waves, which is AWESOME. I'm not even going to pretend to be smart enough to write out an explanation of what that is so just listen in and Isobel will explain it to us. What I will say is that the existence of gravitational waves was predicted by Albert Einstein, and recently confirmed just a few years ago. There's still so much to learn in this field! T...

#121 - Harriet Teare: Healthcare Technology & Accessibility

May 18, 2021 21:09 - 57 minutes - 53.5 MB

Today's storyteller is Dr Harriet Teare! I got connected with Harriet because she's in the newest cohort of Homeward Bound - HB6 - and I put an all call on Twitter to invite them to come be on the podcast! So Harriet is the first of several episodes featuring HB6ers, and I feel a bit like a sophomore in high school now with the new class coming in after me. So that's how Harriet and I got connected, but she's here today to talk about her work in the healthcare space working on managing healt...

#120 - Carol Silberberg: Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry

May 11, 2021 23:44 - 1 hour - 60 MB

Today's storyteller is Dr Carol Silberberg! She's a consultation-liaison psychiatrist living in Melbourne, Australia. I met Carol through HB5 - which is the 5th cohort of Homeward Bound - and it was really great to have her on for a one on one conversation. So, today we talk about a LOT of topics, including about her career, what drew her to medicine in the first place, choosing a path in life, how one transports a cello from Canada to Australia, doctors orchestras, Homeward Bound, education...

#119 - Auriel Fournier: Wetland Birds & Fieldwork

May 05, 2021 01:16 - 58 minutes - 53.7 MB

Today's storyteller is Dr Auriel Fournier! I found Auriel on Twitter because of her rail research, and then turns out that my friend Dr Craig Miller (Episode 27) now works with her at the Illinois Natural History Survey so he connected us. It's a small world out there y'all, and I was so happy to meet Auriel and have her on the pod. The title of the episode is a bit not descriptive enough for everything we talk about in this episode! Auriel is a wetland and waterfowl biologist and also curre...

#118 - Richard Allen White III: All About Viruses

April 27, 2021 23:11 - 1 hour - 60.5 MB

Today's storyteller is Dr Richard Allen White III! Richard is a professor of bioinformatics at UNC Charlotte, and also has a biotech company called RAW Molecular Systems. We talk today about viruses, coronaviruses, viral therapies, eradicating diseases, antibiotic resistance, phage therapy, and a whole host of things. There's something in this episode that Richard says that I want to say again "science is a recipe to seek the truth". I love that. This episode was recorded in mid February, a...

#117 - Damion Whyte: Jamaican Wildlife & Rooster's World

April 21, 2021 01:12 - 54 minutes - 50.6 MB

Today's storyteller is Damion Whyte! Damion is a naturalist and biologist, and is currently a PhD student working on conservation and restoration efforts of the Jamaican iguana on Goat Island. This particular species was thought to be extinct in the 1940s, but was rediscovered in 1990, and there's a lot of research going on with this species. It's really a remarkable story and honestly only one part of all the amazing things that Damion is doing! He's also using social media (as Rooster's Wo...

#116 - Bryan Fry: Venom and Toxicology

April 13, 2021 21:00 - 1 hour - 57.8 MB

Today's storyteller is Dr Bryan Fry! Bryan is a toxicologist working on how toxins impact health, and working a lot with venom, hence why he also goes by the nickname Venom Doc! Which is also the title of his memoir about his experiences, which we'll talk about a few times in this episode. Bryan works with venom from a variety of species, and uses some really powerful technology to accomplish research that literally wasn't possible 20 years ago (as you'll hear in detail). I got connected wit...

#115 - Sarah Youngren: Live from Midway Atoll

April 06, 2021 18:43 - 56 minutes - 52.1 MB

Today's storyteller is Sarah Youngren! She was one of my earliest guests, and a friend of mine from when I was in grad school. In her first episode, we talk about her life as a seabird biologist, which involves "migrating" to different remote areas throughout the year. Sarah and her partner Dan Rapp regularly work out in the Pacific on islands and on Aiktak Island in the Aleutians. Sarah and Dan have been out on Midway Atoll since November, and today actually is their departure day. So they'...

#114 - Amani Webber-Schultz: Sharks and Minorities in Shark Sciences (MISS)

March 30, 2021 23:29 - 1 hour - 55.7 MB

Today's storyteller is Amani Webber-Schultz! Amani is awesome, and this is a great conversation so I'm excited for y'all to hear it. I think I first found Amani on Twitter because of her How It Pants series, where she draws pants on animals and people debate how that critter would wear pants, and I love it. Basically I showed up for the fun critter art and stayed for all the great science and sharks content! Amani majored in marine science at Rutgers, is a co-founder of the Minorities in Sha...

#113 - Antarctica Series 23: Megan McCuller

March 25, 2021 23:09 - 54 minutes - 50.6 MB

This is episode 23 of the Antarctica series, and it's also the final one in the series. Today's storyteller is the perfect finale though to bring this series full circle. So - today's storyteller is Megan McCuller! You may remember her from the very first episode of the Antarctica series where we heard from her as she was onboard the NSF ship the R/V Nathaniel B. Palmer about to embark on an epic journey to Antarctica! In that episode we talked about the work they were going to do, her expec...

#112 - Priya Gandhi: Building Sustainability

March 23, 2021 23:57 - 1 hour - 62.3 MB

Today's storyteller is Priya Gandhi! She's a building sustainability consultant based in Melbourne, Australia, and also she's part of Team HB5 with Homeward Bound! Today Priya and I talk about her work, the kinds of changes people can make in their buildings to be more environmentally friendly, and her career journey to get where she is today, and also we have a chat about Homeward Bound to wrap it up! I'm happy to know Priya through Homeward Bound, and even though we have yet to meet in per...

#111 - Antarctica Series 22: Kirsten Carlson and Greg Neri

March 19, 2021 01:05 - 1 hour - 79.3 MB

Today's storytellers are Kirsten Carlson and Greg Neri! They are co-chairs of the Antarctic Artist and Writers Collective (AAWC), and they went to Antarctica together as part of the National Science Foundation (NSF)'s Antarctic Artist and Writers Program in 2017. The AAWC brings together all past members of the NSF program together to collaborate to inspire and educate the public about Antarctica. Right now the AAWC has an online exhibit called "Adequate Earth" and you should definitely chec...

#110 - Jeremy Conkle: Pollution in Wetlands and Waterways

March 17, 2021 01:20 - 1 hour - 58.3 MB

Today's storyteller is Dr Jeremy Conkle! He's a professor at Texas A&M Corpus Christi, and his specialty is pollution in wetlands, including pharmaceuticals and microplastics. I met Jeremy way back in the day when we were both students at LSU, and today we talk about his journey to his current job and research focus! Jeremy has always done really interesting research, starting with looking at pharmaceuticals in wetlands. I love wetlands as y'all all know but this is an aspect I would never h...

#109 - Antarctica Series 21: Saz Reed

March 11, 2021 23:24 - 51 minutes - 48 MB

Today's storyteller is Saz Reed! Saz is currently a technician for the Scottish Association for Marine Science, known as SAMS, and in this episode we talk about her time when she was based at Rothera in Antarctica for 18 months! She's done a lot of polar work in both directions, is a diver, loves adventure, and was just a treat to talk to. Saz is also the first person I've talked to who has overwintered in Antarctica, which was interesting to hear about. We talk all about her time in Antarct...

#108 - Dakota Hilliard: Astrophysics, Spaceflight, and Extreme Weather

March 10, 2021 02:19 - 1 hour - 66.5 MB

Today's storyteller is Dakota Hilliard! He's an undergraduate at the University of North Dakota here in the US, majoring in astrophysics and minoring in space studies! I asked Dakota to be on the podcast because his enthusiasm for space is infectious (in a good way) and I enjoy following him on Twitter, so I thought it would be fun! I know next to nothing about outer space or astrophysics or anything like that, so Dakota told me all about that. He's very interested in spaceflight and from fo...

#107 - Antarctica Series 20: Marlo Garnsworthy

March 04, 2021 22:44 - 57 minutes - 53.1 MB

Today's storyteller is Marlo Garnsworthy! Marlo is an artist, illustrator, author, and science communicator. She has now travelled to Antarctica twice as an education and outreach officer aboard an Antarctic cruise ship, which is a really important role aboard those ships because they educate and interpret the landscape and environment for passengers. She says in this episode that she had a hard time to put her experience into words, which further shows why art is so important! In this episo...

#106 - S. Yoshi Maezumi: Paleoecology

March 02, 2021 14:00 - 55 minutes - 51 MB

Today's storyteller is Dr Yoshi Maezumi! Yoshi is a paleoecologist and if you don't know what that is (like I didn't) don't worry - that's the very first thing we talk about! She studies the history and long term interactions of people and the environment, specifically focused on how fire plays a role. We talk about how she does this research in the field, what and how they learn from this, and about projects she has going on right now. She also is a Marie Curie Research Fellow at the Univer...

#105 - Antarctica Series 19: Michael Schrimpf

February 26, 2021 01:01 - 57 minutes - 53.3 MB

Today's storyteller is Dr Michael Schrimpf! He's currently doing a postdoc position at the University of Manitoba, and his research interests are species distributions, bird conservation, and species interactions. Today though he's here to talk about his PhD research at Stony Brook University, where he was in the same lab at Alex Borowicz (Episode 75) which you'll hear us reference. So his PhD research focused on the distribution and community ecology of breeding birds in Antarctica! I know ...

#104 - Pat Lennard: Tasmanian Devils, OneHealth, and Immunotherapy

February 24, 2021 03:07 - 57 minutes - 53.5 MB

Today's storyteller is Pat Lennard! He's a PhD student at Leiden University in the Netherlands and from Tasmania. His background is in biotechnology, One Health, and infectious diseases. We start this episode talking about his work with Tasmanian Devils and their transmissible cancer called the Devil Facial Tumor Disease (also known as DFTD). His work with DFTD introduced him to infectious and transmissible diseases and OneHealth. I had never heard of OneHealth but it's basically this idea (...

#103 - Antarctica Series 18: Mike Gooseff

February 19, 2021 00:57 - 1 hour - 61.2 MB

Today's storyteller is Dr Mike Gooseff! He's a professor at the University of Colorado and specializes in hydrology in streams, glaciers and frequently in polar regions, in this case Antarctica! He's also the lead on the McMurdo Dry Valleys Long Term Ecological Research Project, which studies the aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems in the McMurdo Dry Valleys of Antarctica. We talk long-term monitoring (which I love to talk about), the types of data they're collecting. I also am always curious...

#102 - Rebecca Atkins: Salt Marsh Snails & Experiences in STEMM

February 16, 2021 21:02 - 50 minutes - 47.1 MB

Today's storyteller is Rebecca Atkins! She's a PhD student at the University of Georgia studying marsh periwinkles in salt marshes. Marsh periwinkles are an adorable little purplish snail found in coastal salt marshes around the coastal United States. I've always seen them when I do field work but got to learn so much about them from Rebecca. We also talk about how she got into the wetlands / snail research field, and about the course on STEM and feminist theory she just helped teach with ot...

#101 - Antarctica Series 17: Pacifica Sommers

February 11, 2021 22:32 - 58 minutes - 53.9 MB

Today's storyteller is Dr Pacifica Sommers! She is a microbial ecologist based at the University of Colorado - Boulder interested in the ways that microbes drive interactions in ecosystems, and has studied this in (spoiler alert) Antarctica! Pacifica's research is centered in the Taylor Valley area of Antarctica, which may sound familiar to steady listeners because this is also where Schuyler Borges (Episode 99 last week) works! So what Pacifica studies is the microbial communities and inter...

#100 - Rachel Villani: How I Became a Field Biologist (REMIX)

February 09, 2021 14:32 - 57 minutes - 53.1 MB

Today's storyteller is me! This is a remix version of Episode 1, where I share the story of how I became a field biologist. I have re-edited it, added stories, and expanded on things I glossed over in the first version. I won't re-release episodes regularly, but I have learned so much about storytelling, editing, and podcasting in general so I wanted to do the original episode more justice. I've also had a few realizations during the past year that came to me in conversations with other gues...

#99 - Antarctica Series 16: Schuyler Borges

February 05, 2021 01:46 - 55 minutes - 51.2 MB

Today's storyteller is Schuyler Borges! They are a PhD candidate in Astronomy & Planetary Science at Northern Arizona University. Their research, in their own words, is aimed at "understanding how Antarctic microbial communities form remote and in situ biosignatures detectable on rocky, cold planetary bodies in and outside our Solar System". I just find this concept of using Antarctica as an analog for Mars to be just SO COOL and also a totally different approach to research in Antarctica. T...

#98 - Emlyn Resetarits: Aquatic Snails and Parasites

February 02, 2021 23:47 - 54 minutes - 50.4 MB

Today's storyteller is Dr Emlyn Resetarits! She's an aquatic disease ecologist specializing in snails and their parasites, and currently doing a post doc at the University of Georgia. Today we talk all about her research studying aquatic snails and their parasites, including with California Horn Snail in California marshes, and marsh periwinkles in the salt marshes of the southeastern US. So I ask her all about snails, and parasites, and I learned that parasites castrate snails. So if you wa...

#97 - One Year Anniversary

January 29, 2021 11:00 - 12 minutes - 9.24 MB

This is a special one year anniversary episode! Exactly one year ago today I released that very first episode, the one in which I interview myself, and started this whole podcast thing rolling. I am very appreciative of the support over the last year, grateful to have met so many amazing humans, and happy to have learned so much from everyone, and excited to share everyone's stories! Enjoy this short reflection on my favorite moments, how the podcast came to be, and what to expect moving for...

#96 - Antarctica Series 15: Alicia Purcell

January 28, 2021 12:00 - 59 minutes - 54.6 MB

Today's storyteller is Alicia Purcell! She's a PhD candidate at Northern Arizona University, and her background is in microbial ecologist. In her own words, Alicia research is "using field based techniques to understand how the growth of soil microbes change in response to warming temperatures. I'm studying this both in Northern Arizona and on the Antarctic Peninsula". So in this episode Alicia tells me all about both her trips to Antarctica, how she got into the microbe world, about stable ...

#95 - Anna Colucci: Marine Biology to Corporate Sustainability

January 26, 2021 19:00 - 51 minutes - 47.7 MB

Today's storyteller is Anna Colucci! Anna is here today to tell the story of how she grew up in Italy and spent time in the summers on the Mediterranean, where she was fascinated by the water and got interested in marine biology and marine mammals. Our paths often meander and so her path ultimately took her all the way to Australia, then back to Europe, to where she now works in Germany in corporate sustainability.   She is also part of Homeward Bound 5, and so that's how Anna & I met and ya...

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