Search for people, departments, or email addresses.

« Back To Search Results

 

Sarah Elendil Hardee Peterson

 

Ecology & Evolutionary Biology Department

Staff

Ecology & Evolutionary Biology

148A

Long Marine Lab

My research experience and work as a naturalist and science educator have provided me insight into a variety of diverse ecosystems with a focus on upper trophic-level predators. I began the fieldwork component of my ecological career while studying abroad in Africa as an undergraduate. I spent time at the Botswana Wild Dog research camp, where I conducted their yearly ungulate census and helped in the tracking and observation of wild-dogs. I then transitioned gears to conduct research in Sweden for my undergraduate thesis on the specific visual and olfactory cues that a small solitary bee species uses to find the host-plant on which it specializes. After graduating from Whitman College, I worked for over a year as a naturalist in the San Juan Islands of Washington and a science instructor at the Ocean Institute in Dana Point, CA. The Ocean Institute is a non-profit marine institute in southern California where kindergarten through community college students come for marine-based science laboratory and boat programs. I then obtained my Masters degree in Washington studying the movements, home ranges, haul-out site fidelity and abundance of harbor seals, Phoca vitulina, in the Salish Sea. While in graduate school, I was able to spend portions of my summers in southeast Alaska working as the naturalist on a boat that conducted weeklong nature cruises with just a dozen passengers. After finishing my Master's degree I obtained a position studying gray wolves in Yellowstone National Park, working for Dr. Doug Smith. I was part of two winter predation studies and one summer predation study, quantifying the kill-rates and identifying prey selection of gray wolf packs in the northern range of Yellowstone NP. I then transitioned back towards the marine environment while working for USGS on an avian research project in south San Francisco Bay. Now I am here in Santa Cruz and back to marine ecology for my own research!

I am studying northern elephant seals, Mirounga angustirostris, at the Año Nuevo State Reserve for my research. I am currently still exploring the many avenues down which I can take my research but I am focusing on quantifying heavy metals (mercury and lead) and persistant organic pollutants (PCBs, DDTs and PBDEs) in northern elephant seals. I am interested in a broad range of ecological questions including how northern elephant seals may accumulate specific contaminants over the course of a foraging trip (as well as their lifetime) and if there are regions of the north Pacific that we can correlate with increased toxic loads in individual seals. I am also interested in other ecological questions including how elephant seals impact prey populations, how their foraging locations and movements align with other upper-trophic level marine species in the north Pacific and how their movements align with specific measurable oceanographic conditions.

If you have the proper permissions, you can edit this entry

This campus directory is the property of the University of California at Santa Cruz. To protect the privacy of individuals listed herein, in accordance with the State of California Information Practices Act, this directory may not be used, rented, distributed, or sold for commercial purposes. For more details, please see the university guidelines for assuring privacy of personal information in mailing lists and telephone directories. If you have any questions please contact the ITS Support Center.