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  Zan Kay Stremler

Zan Kay Stremler

PhD Student

 

they/them

Physical & Biological Sciences Division

Ocean Sciences Department

PhD Student

Graduate

Earth & Planetary Sciences Department

Earth & Marine Sciences
D450

Ocean Sciences

Biography

Born in Florida, I was raised in rural Iowa, with an ever-present love for the ocean. I attended the University of Miami for my undergraduate studies, where I double majored in Marine Science and Biology. Along the way, I developed a deep interest in earth processes, and I picked up minors in Chemistry and Geology. My interests were further diversified through three years of research in the Close Marine Organic and Isotope Geochemistry lab, where I was first introduced to isotopes as an ecological and climatological tool. My undergraduate thesis work focused on a chemosymbiotic mussel from cold methane seeps, where I developed the first temporal isotope record for this species and habitat. During my summers, I enjoyed working for the Iowa State Parks service through public outreach and water management. I am pursuing my PhD, beginning in 2021, through the co-mentorship of Dr. Adina Paytan at UCSC and Dr. Nancy Prouty at the US Geological Survey.

Research

My PhD research will expand upon the isotope investigation I began as an undergraduate, and apply my skills to new study areas. Through our partnership with the USGS, I will develop a number of projects with isotope geochemistry as the foundation. The first will focus on PAH signals within coral carbonate as a record of fire activity. 

Additional projects focusing on coral ecology will use corals cores to develop the records of coral growth and determine environmental controls on coral growth and erosion. These cores too serve as a temporal record of coral health, which can help predict the future of these ecosystems as factors such as nutrient offloading continue to change.

ASLO 2021 - COMPOUND-SPECIFIC ISOTOPE ANALYSIS OF PERIOSTRACUM GROWTH BANDS FROM BATHYMODIOLUS CHILDRESSI: POTENTIAL TEMPORAL ARCHIVE OF ECOLOGY AT METHANE SEEPS

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