NSFA 2012 Graduate Student Awards
The College of Natural Sciences, Forestry, and Agriculture announces the winners of this year’s graduate student awards.
The Norris Charles Clements Graduate Student Award—Vanessa Coats
Vanessa Coats is a Ph.D. student in biochemistry and molecular biology who is investigating the invasive plant Japanese barberry. Vanessa’s research is breaking new ground by using high-throughput gene sequencing to identify symbiont diversity associated with this invasive ornamental plant. Her research addresses the very practical and important problem of how to prevent and control the spread of invasive plant species in Maine and New England. (Advisor: Mary E. Rumpho-Kennedy)
George F. Dow Graduate Scholarship Fund—Kristin A. Gabor
Kristin Gabor, an IPh.D. student in biomedical sciences, is examining the innate antiviral immune response to viral infection at the single molecule level. All of her studies were conducted in the zebrafish model, and the results of these studies can be transferred and extended to economically important aquatic organisms, such as finfish and shellfish. (Advisors: Carol Kim and Samuel Hess)
Fred Griffee Memorial Award—Jeremy Charette
Jeremy Charette is a Ph.D. degree candidate in biomedical sciences. His research is attempting to characterize the innate immune response of zebrafish to pathogen infection. By using zebrafish as a model, this research can identify targets for immunostimulants and vaccines to help prevent economic loss due to pathogen infection in Maine’s aquaculture industry. (Advisor: Carol Kim)
Outstanding Master’s Degree Student Award—Megan Wibberly
Megan Wibberly is a master’s degree student in the School of Economics whose research focuses on Mainers’ views about environmental and energy-related issues. Her research and education had an interdisciplinary theme, which included coursework in anthropology, communications, and psychology. Megan has exceeded the expectations of her advisors with her creative conceptualization of research problems. She has also mentored undergraduate and high school students, guest-lectured in undergraduate economics classes, and tutored both undergraduate and graduate students. Megan is a Graduate Student Government senator and the student representative to SOE faculty meetings. (Advisor: Mario Teisl)
Outstanding Ph.D. Student Award—Aaron E. Putnam
Aaron Putnam is a Ph.D. student in earth sciences whose research involves reconstructing the evolution of mountain glaciers since the last ice age. Based on data gathered in his 90 weeks of fieldwork in several different countries, Aaron has helped develop state-of-the-art techniques for mapping and exposure-dating of moraines deposited by mountain glaciers. These techniques enable the evaluation of theories of past climate changes. While still a graduate student, he has been lead or co-author on 12 journal articles, including three in Science and one in Nature. Aaron has presented his research at numerous national and international meetings, delivered guest lectures at several universities, and has collaborated with the American Museum of Natural History to produce a documentary film about UMaine research in the Southern Alps of New Zealand. Aaron has recently taken a postdoctoral position at Columbia University in New York. (Advisor: George Denton)
Outstanding Service Award
Brianna Hughes, aPh.D. candidate in food and nutrition sciences,has been an exceptional contributor to her department, university, and profession. Brianna has volunteered many hours for the Consumer Testing Center in the Department of Food Science and Nutrition and has been an active mentor of undergraduate students. Brianna serves the university through her role as Graduate Student Government’s representative to the Board of Trustees, a role she has fulfilled with great energy and success. President Ferguson has recently appointed Brianna as the grad student member of the Strategic Planning Leadership Team—one of two student members. Brianna also volunteers at the Northeast Institute of Food Technologists meetings and the Food Industry Expo; she is vice president of the Food Science Club and president of Golden Key International Honour Society. (Advisor: Denise Skonberg)
Graduate Research Excellence Award—Bess Koffman
Bess Koffman is a Ph.D. student in earth sciences who is studying the role of atmospheric dust in the climate system. Bess’s research addresses one of the most fundamental problems in climate science: the controls of atmospheric carbon dioxide on different time scales. To study this problem, Bess has spent significant time in Antarctica and has developed a new analytical system to process recovered ice cores. The instrumentation that Bess developed is regarded as state-of-the-art and is now being duplicated by other laboratories worldwide. As a result, Bess is now recognized in the international climate community as an expert in ice core geochemistry. (Advisor: Karl Kreutz)