REU in Biodiversity Conservation

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2008 REU Projects
Lumber River Sampling Register Pit Sampling



 

2008 REU Projects

Participant Project Title

 

Max Christie

The College of William and Mary, VA

Ecological interactions across a late Pliocene interval of faunal turnover: naticid cannibalism north and south of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina

 

Stephen Durham

Dartmouth College
NH

Observations of Fasciolaria feeding behavior as a baseline for interpreting the trace fossil record of predation

Shells of the tulip snail Fasciolaria lilium hunteria often exhibit small (<1 cm), scallop-shaped repair scars parallel to the growth lines of the convex edge of the apertural lip. These scars have been assumed to be induced by the predators’ own feeding behavior. Wells (1958) observed that, in attacking bivalves, Fasciolaria inserts the edge of its apertural lip between the prey’s valves in order to wedge them apart, which may result in breakage to the predator’s shell.  This wedging behavior is not used in feeding on gastropods.  Wells also observed a preference for gastropod prey over bivalves, perhaps because of the risk involved in attacking bivalves. In this study, we document whether the repair scars commonly found on the shell of tulip snails result from shell wedging and reevaluate Wells’ observation of a preference for gastropod prey. 

 

Elizabeth A. Graybill

Lafayette College
PA

Age of the Duplin and Waccamaw Formations, Cape Fear River Basin, North Carolina

The age of Plio-Pleistocene stratigraphic units in southern North Carolina has been greatly debated.  Dating these strata is important for correlation to other coastal plain strata.  Two formations were studied, the Duplin and Waccamaw.  DuBar (1980) dated these units as Pliocene and early to mid Pleistocene, respectively.  Cronin et al. (1984) dated the Duplin as late Pliocene and the Waccamaw as latest Pliocene to earliest Pleistocene.  Using microfossils, Swain (1968) dated the Waccamaw as late Miocene to early Pliocene.  Campbell & Campbell (1992) claimed the youngest Waccamaw sediments are older than 2.0 Ma.  Blackwelder (1981) considered all Waccamaw deposits as early Pleistocene.  Based on the presence of molluscan taxa also found in the late Pliocene Caloosahatchee Formation of Florida, Lyons (1991) considered at least the lower Waccamaw Formation (?) as late Pliocene.

 

Jessica Gail Lambert

SUNY College of Envir Sci & Forestry
NY

Anthropogenic Influence on the Health of Oyster Reef Ecosystems in southeastern North Carolina as Evidenced by rank-order abundance of Living and Death Assemblages

 

Pedro Monarrez

California State University, Fullerton
CA

Isotope Sclerochronology of Late Pliocene Turritellidae (Gastropoda) from Southeastern North Carolina

 

Brad Parnell

University of North Carolina Pembroke
NC

Paleoenvironments of the Duplin (Pliocene) and Waccamaw (Plio-Pleistocene?) Formations in Southeastern North Carolina inferred from microfossils

 

Joshua J. Poole

Elizabeth City State University
NC

Unexpected absence of cannibalism for the naticid gastropod Neverita duplicata under experimental conditions of high competition

 

Jennifer Toledo Rivera

University of Puerto Rico

Anthropogenic influence on the rank-order abundance of living and death assemblages of sea grass associated mollusks at Chadwick Bay, Onslow County, NC

 

Kevin Selders

University of North Carolina Chapel Hill
NC

Using latitudinal differences in growth increment formation in Mercenaria mercenaria to locate paleobiogeographic boundaries in the western North Atlantic

 

 

This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. EAR-0755109

 


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