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Sea
& Learn 2008 promises to be one of the most interesting
programs ever! As always, a cast of experts in
various fields of nature is in place. The index on the left is
a quick 'click and jump' reference to take you directly
to a subject matter or expert's photo and his/her biography.
Better yet, just scroll down the page to meet them all.
Monitor this page for regular updates of new experts as well
as more details of their actual dates and schedules for the 2008 event.

Note: Many of our experts have numerous degrees
constituting proper titles and "letters behind their names".
Sea & Learn has chosen to only use our guest speakers' birth
names in order to emphasize the casual learning environment
of our program which is designed for 'the lay person'.
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Nathan Muchhala
has
been working on bat pollination in the tropics since 1999. For his
Ph.D with the University of Miami, Nathan conducted fieldwork in the
cloud forests of the Andes of Ecuador, where he captured nectar bats
to study their diets and videotaped their visits to bat-pollinated
flowers. Through experiments with bats and flowers in screen tents,
he explored various aspects of the ecology and evolution of
bat-flower interactions. During this fieldwork he also discovered a
remarkable new species of nectar bat which can extend its tongue to
150% of its body length (the longest tongue, relative to body size,
of any mammal). A current project of his, as a post-doctoral
researcher with the University of Toronto, involves studying the
co-evolution of this bat with the long-tubed flowers that it
pollinates. Other current research includes comparing the
effectiveness of bats and hummingbirds as pollinators, and building
computer simulations to explore the evolution of pollination
systems. See Nathan’s website
www.bio.miami.edu/muchhala/home.html for more information on his
research, including photos, videos, and publications. Get excited to
join Nathan and Kevin Murphy as they work with Saba's bat population,
considered unique for 5-7 species in just 5 square miles.
Muchhala and Murray were the kickoff Opening Night presentators at Scout's Place at
5:30 p.m. on October 1. Don't miss a follow-up talk specifically
about Saba's bats on Monday, October 6 2008 @ The Brigadoon. The
public field project on Sat, October 4 was a record breaker!
35 kids, locals and tourists had a great time (2 sessions) on the
Mt. Scenery trail as they participated in bat research.
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Kevin
Murray
will be working with Nathan
Muchhala to study Saba's bat populations. Kevin received his
Bachelor’s and Master’s Degrees from Missouri State University in
Springfield, MO. He began his research career as an undergraduate
studying anti-predator behavior in larval salamanders. For his
Master’s Degree, he worked on identifying the echolocation calls of
species of bats throughout the Midwest. Following his Master’s Degree,
he studied the roosting habitat of species of bats in the Oregon and
the endangered Indiana Bat in Missouri. In 2002, Dr. Murray began his
Ph.D. at the University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida studying the
genetic structure and evolutionary history of several bat lineages in
the Greater Antilles. His research focused on the genetic structure
and mating system of the Buffy Flower Bat, Erophylla sezekorni
in Exuma, Bahamas, but also included work throughout the Bahamas,
Cayman Islands, Jamaica, and the Domican Republic. Kevin continues to
focus his research on the evolution, conservation, and island
biogeography of bats.
Don't
miss their kickoff Opening Night presentation at Scout's Place at
5:30 p.m. on October 1 as well as a follow-up talk specifically
about Saba's bats on Monday, October 6 2008 @ The Brigadoon Sign up for
their field project to help mist net bats on Sat, October 4.
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Vince Capone
is a Marine Scientist with over 20 years of
professional experience mapping and searching the world’s oceans using
the latest marine technology. His degree in marine science included
studying Tropical Reef Ecology at the West Indies Laboratorty in St.
Croix. Vince has been an instructor
at the Isle of Shoals Marine Lab and Dowling College. He has a
Master’s degree in marine science with a minor in experimental
statistics. He started diving in 1976 on New Jersey shipwrecks. He was
nominated as a Fellow to the International Explorer’s Club in 1989.
Currently he is president and founder of
Black Laser Learning,
a company dedicated to training and enhancing people’s remote sensing
skills. The company founded in 2004 has recently released a second
edition of the, The Not in the Manual Guide
TM
to Side Scan Sonar Image Interpretation.
Join
Vince on Saba as he introduces the many
possibilities of marine science to Saba's youth while conducting an
underwater mapping project of one of Saba's dive sites.
With the use of the latest technology, Vince will create a high
resolution bathymetric map to help us understand how water
depth and ecosystem morphology affect the sea creatures of Saba. Join
us for this exciting Saba event:
Vince will be on Saba and the dive boats October 9-14 2008. Join Vince for his
public presentation Monday, October 13 2008 @ The Brigadoon. |
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Chris Parsons
is currently teaching Oceanography, Marine Conservation and Marine
Mammal Biology and Conservation at
George Mason University in
Virginia. Chris was the Director of the Research and
Education Departments of the Hebridean Whale and Dolphin Trust (HWDT)
from 1998 to 2003. Parsons is also a research associate at the
University Marine Biological Station, Millport. His involvement in whale and dolphin research has been ongoing for more
than a decade spanning the globe from South Africa, India, China and the
Caribbean as well as the U.K. Prior to working at HWDT,
Parsons was involved in research on Indo-Pacific humpback dolphins
and finless porpoises in Hong Kong and China which involved studies
on the behavior and ecology of Hong Kong's cetaceans, marine
pollution and its effects on marine life. Parsons, like his
marine mammal scientist wife, Naomi Rose,
is a member of the International Whaling Commission. Join
Chris to understand the perils facing these gentle giants and how
present day whaling rights sales in nearby islands are being addressed
from a scientific and political perspective.
Join Chris on a dive boat but don't miss his
presentation Saturday, October 18 @ Scout's Place.
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Barbara Richardson
is recognized worldwide for her study of the
assemblages of invertebrate animals that live in bromeliads and other
phytotelms [plant held waters]. Since 1993 she has collected, counted,
identified and analysed the species richness of the animal communities
in these bromeliad microcosms, especially in the rain forests of
Puerto Rico, but also in Dominica and Costa Rica, and hopes next year
to study the Saban bromeliad animals as part of a comparative study of
island biogeography. Barbara was a professor at Napier University,
Edinburgh, teaching ecology and animal behaviour, and still lives in
Edinburgh, but is never happier than when she is studying
invertebrates in Caribbean bromeliads and heliconias. Her work is
funded by the US National Science Foundation through the Luquillo Long
Term Ecological Research program where she is a Principal
Investigator, collaborating with staff at the University of Puerto
Rico and the International Institute of Tropical Forestry. She is
helped in the field, and in the maintenance of a large database, by
her husband Mike, a retired plant pathologist. Together they have
published papers on phytotelm ecology, and on the ecology of insects
in forest floor litter, in leading journals. As part of the Sea &
Learn Program Barbara will talk about biodiversity on Caribbean
islands and demonstrate how she uses bromeliad microcosms to assess
the biodiversity and functioning of these small ecosystems. Her
presentation will illustrate some of her results and show
photomicrographs of the normally ‘unseen’ small animals in these
habitats.
Plan a
hike with Barbara to understand our bromeliad populations. Barbara's presentation
will be Thursday, October 16 @ The Ecolodge; Field Project: Saturday,
October 18. |
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Sip Swierstra
studied electronics in Eindhoven, the Netherlands. After graduation
Sip joined the Philips Research Labs in 1967 to develop technology
leading to an automatic radar guided braking system for automobiles,
the base technology for the traffic radar systems still in use by the
police today. At the University of California, San Diego, USA, he
designed and built a radio telescope system for the study of solar
wind characteristics. In the mid seventies, Sip joined Eurocontrol,
the European Organisation for the Safety of Air Navigation, viz. the
European FAA. He was the technical lead for innovative research in Air
Traffic Management. This work focuses on research leading to the
development of advanced Aircraft Performance models and Aircraft
Trajectory Prediction techniques. The application of this technology
in automated Decision Support Tools for Air Traffic Controllers
improves the safety and the efficiency of Air Navigation in general
and, in addition, aims to minimize the impact of aircraft operations
on the environment. The latter is a prerequisite for ensuring the
sustainable growth of the industry as a whole. In 2007 he
retired from Eurocontrol and is now a resident of Saba. He continues
working part time as a consultant to Boeing Research and Technology
Center focusing on the worldwide integration of computers systems
onboard aircraft with those supporting Air Traffic Control on the
ground. Sip is also associated with the University of Glasgow,
Scotland, UK, Department of Aerospace Engineering.
Join Sip for an interesting
presentation on yet another facet of our environment Wednesday October
22 @ The Brigadoon. Get a great learning experience by working
with Sip on an air traffic control simulator--Sunday, October 26.
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Kathleen Dudzinski
has been studying dolphin behavior and communication
since 1990 with a focus on tactile, behavioral and acoustic signals
employed by dolphins as they share information with each other and
across groups. Dr. Dudzinski is Director of the
Dolphin
Communication Project (DCP) where she conducts research on three
groups of dolphins in both captive and wild environments, and oversees
research conducted by graduate students from five universities who
collaborate with DCP. She has adjunct status at the University
of Southern Mississippi, Al;aska Pacific University and the University
of Rhode Island. Kathleen designed
and built a new system for simultaneously recording the behavior and
vocalizations of dolphins underwater . She and another colleague also engineered an
echolocation click detector in addition to her original mobile
recording system to capture and document information on dolphin
echolocation signals. Also through DCP, Dr. Dudzinski teaches a
variety of classes, workshops and seminars at the secondary school and
college levels.
Join
Kathleen October 8-15, 2008 for 3 different lectures:
Thurs Oct 9 @ Saba's Treasures; Sat Oct 11 @ Queen's Gardens; Tue Oct
14 @ Saba's Treasures. She will be on dive boats during this time with the hope of spotting
dolphins but also conducting fascinating field projects--link
for the schedule. |
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Dean
"Sharkman" Fessler
is the Education Director for the
Shark
Research Institute and calls Princeton, New Jersey home when
not traveling. Dean has dived and researched shark species
around the world including: Sand tiger sharks off the North
Carolina coasts, Bull sharks and Caribbean reef sharks off the
Bahamas, Black tipped reef sharks off Palau and White sharks off South
Africa and Guadeloupe Island. He has worked with the Scripps
Institution of Oceanography and was recently elected in to the
Explorer's Club. In his spare time, he is authoring a children's
book about white sharks.
Dean had to cancel at the last minute but filmmaker Tyler MacLeod introduced the movie Shark
Water at Tropics Cafe: Friday Oct 3. The feature film was ollowed
with an open forum to discuss the risks to sharks' existence worldwide
and locally. |
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Jeffrey A.
George
is
the Curator for Sea Turtle, Inc. based on South Padre Island, Texas.
The center rehabilitates injured sea turtles found on the south Texas
coast. Additionally they provide education about sea turtles and
their marine environment and assist with conservation efforts in Texas
and around the world by supporting sea turtle nesting programs. He
holds a B.S. degree in mathematics and is a retired steel industry
executive. Jeffrey began his work with sea turtles as a volunteer in
1992 and turtles quickly became his passion. He has worked with
veterinarians for the last 9 years in developing protocols for
treatment and has successfully released over 400 rehabilitated
turtles. In 2008, he is part of a team attempting a prosthetic
flipper for an Atlantic Green sea turtle with only one flipper. Join
Jeffrey as he provides a diver’s guide to identifying sea turtle
species interesting and sea turtle rehabilitation stories.
Join Jeffrey on dive boats in late October; his presentation is
scheduled for Fri Oct 24 @ The Ecolodge.
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Stewart Chipka
is
now a familiar face on Saba--commonly referred to as "The Orchid
Guy". Stewart began his interest in orchids as a child, inspired by
his Czeh immigrant grandfather, a Miami orchid breeder. Trained as a
structural engineer his life long interest in orchids resulted in his
pursuit of a Masters degree in Botany and continuing toward his PhD
specializing in orchids. He has worked extensively in orchid research
in Belize, Honduras, Mexico, Costa Rica and Cuba and publishes in
orchid magazines and botanical journals. His activities on Saba began
in the winter of 2002 with the beginning of an island orchid survey
that continues to this day. He has also assisted in the survey by the
New York Botanical Garden cataloging project on Saba for the past two
years. To date, he has catalogued 26 naturalized species of orchids,
in six genera, for the island of Saba. A founding member of and past
president of Encyclia Enthusiasts, Inc., a specialists group of the
American Orchid Society, he established the Saba Biological
Research Foundation on Saba in 2006. He is currently preparing a book
on the Saba orchids as a result of his studies and field research.
Join Stewart on a hike as well as his intriguing presentation about
Saba's orchid populations.
Enjoy
his presentation Tue Oct 21 @ Tropics and plan a hike with him on
either Thursday Oct 23 in the afternoon or Saturday morning Oct 25 |
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Graham Forrester
is a
marine ecologist and conservation biologist who has been studying
coral reefs for the past 23 years. After learning to dive while a
student in the UK, Graham left to study fish on the Great Barrier
Reef, and has been fascinated with coral reefs ever since. For the
past 17 years, he has focused his efforts in the Caribbean, mostly
working at sites in the Bahamas and British Virgin Islands. Graham is
currently a professor at the University of Rhode Island, and before
that at UCLA, where he teaches marine biology and conservation. Much
of his research tries to better understand the details of how fish
species on the reef interact with their predators, competitors and
parasites. This means countless hours on SCUBA, experimenting with
fishes and their habitat underwater. Witnessing the reefs he studies
slowly declining over the years, has spurred him to also work on
projects aimed at improving our ability to manage and conserve coral
reefs. He is in the midst of a four year Caribbean-wide project aimed
at figuring out ways to make marine protected areas more effective.
As part of Sea and Learn, Graham will talk about another ongoing
project trying to develop simple methods for transplanting corals that
can be used by volunteer divers. He hopes that "gardening" with
corals can help coral populations to recover and restore good habitat
for his favorite fishes.
Graham will be on the three dive boats throughout his stay--don't miss his
presentation Tue Oct 28 @ Scout's Place. |
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Tom van
t'Hof
is a
marine biologist recognized worldwide for his designing of marine
parks. Tom is to be given credit for the design of Saba and St.
Eustatius's (the more common name for our neighboring island St.
Eustatius is "Statia") marine parks but also for Bonaire, Curacao and
other parks from Kenya to Indonesia. Choosing Saba as his home since
1986, Tom was the original director of Saba's Conservation Foundation
for its first ten years. As an active environmentalist, author and
consultant, Tom is never at a loss for something to do. The Nature of
Saba, Guide to the Saba Marine Park, and Guide to Saba's Nature Trails
are just the books about Saba which Tom has written or co-authored.
He and artist wife Heleen own Saba's Eco-lodge Rendezvous.
Throughout the month of October, join Tom on Wednesday nights @ The
Ecolodge for his cloud forest presentation--his official Sea & Learn
presentation will be Wed Oct 8 @ The Ecolodge. |
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Rod Stewart
is a volcano-seismologist at the Seismic
Research Centre, University of the West Indies, Trinidad. Recently, he
has spent part of his time as Acting Director of Montserrat Volcano
Observatory, monitoring the Soufriere Hills Volcano which has been
erupting for the last thirteen years on the small Caribbean island of
Montserrat. Rod, as he tends to be called, trained as a seismologist
and then worked in such diverse areas as nuclear-explosion monitoring,
geothermal energy and the oil industry. He was bitten by the volcano
bug when he took a job at Rabaul Volcano Observatory in Papua New
Guinea and witnessed a major eruption. Since then, Rod has worked on
volcanoes in Japan, the Caribbean and the South Atlantic and has
become well-respected in his field. He tried to give up volcanology
for a while, but was tempted back to the subject and to the Caribbean
in May last year. The Seismic Research Centre is responsible for
monitoring volcanoes and earthquakes throughout the English-speaking
Eastern Caribbean which allows Rod to indulge himself in what he now
admits to be an obsession with volcanoes.
Join Rod for a hike on Wednesday, Ocotber 29. Be part of our Grand Finale evening and enjoys Rod's presentation
on October 30, 2009 @ Tropics Cafe. |
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Kerry McDonald
has over
25 years experience in the development of geothermal energy in North
America, Latin America, and the Caribbean. UHe attended his doctorate
program in resource Management at the Colorado School of Mines.
McDonald is the developer and US patent holder of the extraction of
zinc, silver, and other minerals from geothermal brines.
Presently, Kerry is the founder and CEO of West Indies Power Holdings
B.V. (WIPH) which is developing the largest geothermal plant in the
Caribbean. In 2010 the island nation of St Kitts and Nevis will obtain
all of its energy from geothermal power and will be the country least
dependent on fossil fuels in the world. WIPH is also developing
geothermal plants on Saba, Dominica, and St Vincent. Join Kerry
on Saba to understand the process that will allow the geothermal power
produced on these islands to be transported by submarine electrical
transmission cables to their neighboring islands and how our
environment can benefit from geothermal power.
Join Kerry on Sunday for a dive to our Hot Springs and then be sure
to attend his important presentation Sun Oct 26 @ Queen's
Gardens t 1:00 p.m. |
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