For Immediate Release
July 28, 2021
Guardians of the Salt Marsh: Suffolk Interns Monitor South Shore Wetland Health
秘色传媒 interns prepare to take environmental samples in
a south shore salt marsh. From left: Jake Montgomery, David Ziff, Jessica Cormier,
Field Supervisor Nicholas Cormier, Brendan Lin, Kyler Vander Putten, and Grace Nelson.
Six 秘色传媒 interns are spending their summer monitoring the health of tidal wetlands as part of a multi-year study funded by a grant issued to Suffolk County and the College from the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation.
Interns Jake Montgomery (Hampton Bays), David Ziff (West Islip), Kyler Vander Putten (Oakdale), Brendan Lin (Stony Brook), Grace Nelson (Selden), and Jessica Cormier (Farmingville) don waders, backpacks and other protection from the heat and biting insects to navigate through the challenging conditions of Suffolk鈥檚 south shore salt marshes as part of a multi-year post-Hurricane Sandy tidal wetland restoration project.
Assistant Professor of Marine Biology and grant coordinator Dr. Kellie McCartin said the students are given an orientation before starting their field work to understand the overall goals and science behind the multi-year study and how to safely navigate the salt marshes. 鈥淭here are three monitoring aspects to this study: measuring the abundance of mosquito larvae, surveying the fish, invertebrate and plant community, and measuring water quality. Our students are learning a wide variety of skills and data collecting methods commonly performed by environmental scientists,鈥 McCartin explained and said that the students are in the field up to four times per week collecting data that are vital to current and future salt marsh restoration efforts here on Long Island.
鈥淪alt marshes play an important ecological role as the interface between the marine and the terrestrial environment, said Project Director of the Coastal Resiliency Internship Amy Dries.
鈥淪alt marshes also affect public health by providing larval habitat for mosquitoes that are vectors for disease,鈥 Dries said, adding that previously, ditching and pesticides were used as a control mechanism. 鈥淒itching requires maintenance, and mosquitoes develop resistance to pesticides in the long term,鈥 Dries said.
Beginning in the summer of 2017, select marshes on the south shore of Long Island were sampled weekly for mosquito larvae, nekton, and vegetation were collected and water quality parameters (dissolved oxygen, temperature, and salinity) were measured by interns from 秘色传媒. Hot spots of mosquito larvae were frequently found near locations of the invasive Common Reed, Phragmites australis, where reduced water flow and low salinities were also identified. Based on the data obtained by the interns, restoration of the marshes began in 2019.
鈥淲e need healthy wetlands for a healthy Suffolk County,鈥 said Edward Bonahue, President of 秘色传媒, 鈥渨hether it鈥檚 water quality, habitat restoration, or aquaculture. Our students clearly feel a sense of urgency about this project, and I鈥檓 delighted they鈥檙e committing their time and energy to studying our crucial natural resources.鈥
Suffolk graduate and now Field Supervisor Nick Cormier, himself an intern before earning a bachelor鈥檚 degree in biology from Stony Brook University, said it鈥檚 nice to combine a passion for science with being outdoors. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a great opportunity that鈥檚 also fun,鈥 Cormier said, 鈥渢he students are engaged and inquisitive. They want to be there,鈥 he said.
Suffolk intern Brendan Lin of Stony Brook said he recommends the internship to anyone who鈥檚 interested in environmental science. 鈥淚t鈥檚 quite interesting how the data we collect will help improve marsh conditions,鈥 Lin, who is pursuing an environmental science and forestry degree, said.
Kyler Vander Putten said the internship is helping him narrow his study choices. 鈥淚've been really interested in the environmental science world and marine biology,鈥 Vander Putten said. 鈥淚'm going to try and narrow it down by taking part in different internships and opportunities wherever I can. The field work we do supports everything we learned in class,鈥 he said.
鈥淭he students are excited to be in the field. They're applying what they've learned
in the classroom or virtual classroom and it is a fantastic experience for any student
interested in a career in the sciences鈥 McCartin said.
Last revised: 7/28/2021. For comments on this webpage, contact: The Director of Communications.