Connecticut Sea Grant has selected six research projects for the 2022-2024 funding cycle. Focuses of these grants include gaining an understanding of marine life amid changing environmental conditions, community’s perception and behaviors in response to flood risks, and human relationships with the marine environment and individuals’ “ocean identity”. The projects are slated to receive a total of $765,585 in federal funds administered by CT Sea Grant, matched by $410,564 in non-federal funds, for a total research investment of more than $1.17 million. The awards are contingent on receipt of expected federal funding early in 2022.
The six projects are:
- Hannes Bauman of the UConn Marine Sciences Department will work with Deborah Pacileo and Jacqueline Benway of the Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection to investigate the abundance and growth of black sea bass to determine the role of rising water temperatures and salinity in the increasing populations of this fish in Long Island Sound. The fish will be harvested from DEEP’s spring trawl surveys in 2022 and 2023, and ear bone structures called otoliths that record annual growth will be analyzed. Richard McBride of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Northeast Fisheries Science Center will also participate in the research. This project will receive $149,173 in CTSG funding, supplemented with $77,205 in matching funds.
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Hans Dam of the UConn Marine Sciences Department will work with Michael Finiguerra of the UConn Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology to test the impact of various climate change conditions on the survival of copepods, microscopic marine animals that are key to the food webs of Long Island Sound and other coastal and offshore waters. The research will further an earlier CT Sea Grant-funded project that established rapid but limited adaptation of these zooplankton to changing environmental conditions over 25 generations. The new experiments will focus on response to ocean warming, ocean acidification and combined warming and acidification. This project will receive $149,563 in CTSG funding, supplemented with $78,214 in matching funds.
• Sean Grace of the SCSU Department of Biology will work with Colette Feehan of the Montclair State University Department of Biology to pilot the use of “green gravel”—small granite rocks seeded with kelp spores—in the restoration of kelp forests in Long Island Sound. Three sites in eastern Long Island Sound will be seeded with kelp in partnership with local kelp farmers. The purpose of the project is to develop cost-effective and scalable restoration techniques for this key native seaweed that supports a highly diverse marine ecosystem. Many kelp forests have been lost or degraded due to various human impacts. The project will receive $36,844 in CTSG funding, supplemented with $20,734 in matching funds. - James Knighton of the UConn Department of Natural Resources and the Environment will assess how socio-economic factors influence the behavior of coastal communities with respect to flood insurance and mitigation measures. The project will use census and National Flood Insurance Program data to characterize factors that account for variations in flood risk tolerance, hazard to loss relationships, precautionary actions taken after loss and the memory retention of past floods. Specifically, the research will examine seven coastal Connecticut communities with coastal surge barriers, and present findings to flood mitigation experts to inform efforts in communities with high social vulnerability that underutilize programs to manage flood risk. This project will receive $146,337 in CTSG funding, supplemented with $74,316 in matching funds.
- Miriah Russo Kelly of the Department of Environmental, Geography and Marine Studies at SCSU will work with Jo-Marie Kasinak of the Department of Biology at Sacred Heart University and Emma McKinley, a research fellow at Cardiff University, to assess the concept of ocean identity and its application to ocean education, engagement and outreach programs. Ocean identity refers to people’s values and emotions surrounding their relationships with the ocean and environmental identity. The researchers will conduct a survey throughout New England about human relationships with ocean ecosystems, then analyze the results for differences in race, age, gender and geographic location. The survey results would be used to develop a toolkit for organizations that provide outreach and education around ocean issues. Jennifer Mattei of the Department of Biology at Sacred Heart and Jamie Vaudrey of the UConn Marine Sciences Department will assist in the project. This project will receive $143,309 in CTSG funding, supplemented with $89,553 in matching funds.
- Christopher Perkins and Jessica Brandt, of the Center for Environmental Sciences and Engineering and the UConn Department of Natural Resources and the Environment, will examine PFAS contamination in shellfish and the phytoplankton they consume. PFAS—per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances—are chemicals used in a variety of consumer and industrial products that are persistent in the environment. Growing evidence suggests they have to numerous adverse effects on humans and wildlife. The shellfish and phytoplankton chosen for the study would come from an area with known or suspected PFAS contamination. Blue mussels and oysters from this area would be analyzed for concentrations of PFAS, and those results compared with concentrations of PFAS in phytoplankton. The findings would be shared with public health, aquaculture and environmental management professionals. The project will receive $140,359 in CTSG funding, supplemented with $70,542 in matching funds.
Full article at https://seagrant.uconn.edu/2021/11/04/marine-life-human-sea-interactions-to-be-explored-by-researchers/