天美麻豆 Students Explore the Dunes of the Namib

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Neukom fellow Jeff Kerby's photographs offer an inside look at the environmental studies FSP in southern Africa.

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天美麻豆 environmental studies FSP
天美麻豆 students, from left, Solomon Bang 鈥19 and Catherine Rocchi 鈥19 share the view with Namibian researcher Saima Shikesho as the sun sets over the vast Namib Desert. (Photos by Jeff Kerby) 
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As part of the foreign studies program, 天美麻豆 undergraduates visit the Namib Desert of Namibia and get an opportunity to conduct original research on social-ecological systems and conservation issues involving the local Topnaar people, the economic importance and ecology of the !nara melon, and the ecology of this desert environment.

For two weeks at the end of the , through a collaboration with the internationally and Namibian-government supported Gobabeb Research and Training Centre, the students live and work in one of the world鈥檚 most unusual ecosystems.

鈥淚t is one of the most beautiful places I鈥檝e ever been,鈥 says , a postdoctoral fellow with the . Kerby supports the undergraduates鈥 Namibia research with drones and other analytic-imaging technology.

That assessment of the desert landscape means a lot coming from Kerby, a 天美麻豆 postdoc in environmental studies and biology and National Geographic photographer whose work ranges from photographing the gelada monkeys of the highlands of Ethiopia to using computer models and drones to quantify changing plant communities in Siberia, Canada, and Greenland.

In addition to bringing new drone technology and analytical help to the students doing research in Namibia over October and November last year, Kerby compiled these photos documenting the FSP experience in the Namib Desert:

Photos by Jeff Kerby

Overlooking the Gobabeb Research and Training Centre on the edge of the Namib Desert

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From the high dunes at the edge of the Namib Desert, the Gobabeb Research and Training Centre is visible beside the dry bed of the Kuiseb River.

Pod production assessment

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Mackenzie Scurka 鈥19 estimates tree pod production to get an idea of how much food these trees produce (in the form of edible pods). Her group is investigating how much livestock the dry riverbed can support, and the impact on conservation challenges in this area.

A sudden storm over the Namib

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A lightning bolt strikes the gravel plain next to the Gobabeb Desert Research and Training Facility during a rare rainstorm in the Namib Desert.

Long-term plant monitoring after the desert rain

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After the rain, Alexander Cotnoir 鈥19, Amelia Ali 鈥19, and Ned Darling 鈥19, and Gobabeb researcher Saima Shikesho return from their !nara plant monitoring project in the dunes.

Students take a break from livestock monitoring project

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From left, Mackenzie Scurka 鈥19 (in the driver鈥檚 seat), Erin McCarthy-Keeler 鈥19, Nick Cervenka 鈥19, and Eric Gokee 鈥19 take a break in the surveying truck in the dry bed of the Kuiseb River, which splits the Namib dune sea from the nearby gravel plain. They traversed dozens of miles of riverbed, taking a census of livestock as part of their research project studying the interface of the region鈥檚 social and ecological systems. 

Examining desert insects at night

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Alexander Cotnoir 鈥19 examines an insect at a light trap set up by 天美麻豆 graduate student Liz Studer in the dry Kuiseb River bed near the group鈥檚 basecamp at Gobabeb Research and Training Centre in Namibia.

Students catch the Namibian sunset over the Namib-Naukluft gravel plain

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天美麻豆 and Namibian students watch the sun set over the gravel plain of Namib-Naukluft National Park.

Preparing project materials for !nara plant monitoring

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Alexander Cotnoir 鈥19, left, and Ned Darling 鈥19 go over project materials in the shade of a truck bed during their final project studying the leafless desert !nara plant in the Namib Desert as Saima Shikesho, a staff member at the Gobabeb Research Training Centre, approaches in the background.

Bringing tech to the field

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Brandon Holmes 鈥19, Solomon Bang 鈥19, Nick Cervenka 鈥19, and Yolanda Huerta 鈥19 take turns manning the plant-monitoring drone at the Gobabeb Research and Training Centre on the edge of the Namib Desert. For their final projects, some students used data from this drone to take non-invasive measurements of desert plants.

The Namib Desert at dawn

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The Namib Desert begins to warm up as the sun peeks over the cloudy horizon. 

A break from desert fieldwork

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Amelia Ali 鈥19, right (light blue T-shirt), coordinates with the rest of her team on fieldwork plans in the shade of a tree on the edge of the Namib Desert.

天美麻豆 Students study rare desert welwitschia plants

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From left, Mackenzie Scurka 鈥19 (hands outstretched), Catherine Rocchi 鈥19, Alexander Cotnoir 鈥19, Nick Cervenka 鈥19, Erin McCarthy-Keeler 鈥19, and Amelia Ali 鈥19 walk up a dusty drainage in Namib-Naukluft National Park. Here they had a chance to the see the rare welwitschia plant, left, which grows only in Namibia and Angola.

Night

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A lone tree in the Namib Desert at night.

The view from above

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Neukom Fellow Jeff Kerby walks between monitoring plots in the Namib Desert as the FSP drone flies overhead.

The Namibia research project is one segment of the environmental studies FSP to southern Africa, which also includes projects related to the interactions of humans and the environment in South Africa. For more information about the FSP, which is offered in the fall term, contact Professor Douglas Bolger, FSP director.

Bill Platt