Anna Robuck is one of three national scholarship recipients
Anna Robuck, a Ph.D. student at the Graduate School of Oceanography at the University of Rhode Island. Photo by Michael Salerno. |
Now
29, Robuck is well on her way to protecting the global waters and its marine
life as a doctoral student at the University of Rhode Island’s Graduate School
of Oceanography. Robuck won the Dr. Nancy Foster Scholarship Program, a leading
science organization that supports women in the ocean sciences. She was one of
three recipients nationally.
“This
is an incredible honor,” says Robuck, who lives in Newport and grew
up in Chadds Ford, Pa. “I’m elated. This scholarship allows me to
pursue a lifelong passion—preserving the ocean I love, and its amazing
creatures.”
The
third-year Ph.D. student will research how chemicals used as water repellants
and flame retardants are contaminating air, water, sediment and animals at
Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary, a popular whale watching spot at the
center of Massachusetts Bay.
To
accomplish this, she’ll focus on how contaminants get in the food web of the
Great Shearwater, a common seabird off the Atlantic coast that rarely comes
ashore, except during storms. The bird lives and feeds over a vast area so
examining it provides information about the entire offshore environment.
“I
want to paint a picture of what pollutants are out there, and how they might be
traveling through the food web that supports the birds,” says Robuck.
“Great Shearwaters are an ideal subject for this sort of work. They are top
predators but still a manageable size. Studying them allows me to get all sorts
of data about the top of the food chain and work my way down.”
Robuck,
who already has preliminary samples from the birds at the marine sanctuary,
will continue traveling to the area on a research vessel over the next few
years. She’ll examine live Shearwaters, caught with hoop nets, and dead
Shearwaters, accidentally captured in fishing nets, to determine what they’re eating
and the types of pollutants in their tissue.
“My
research will clear up a lot of unknowns in this offshore environment,” she
says. “My work will help piece together who’s eating who out there. If my
results show contaminants in the birds, this says that chemicals from products
we use daily are traveling through air and water miles and miles offshore. This
could be cause for serious concern. We don’t know how the chemical soup the
birds are exposed to could be harming them.”
Awarded
by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Office of National
Marine Sanctuaries, the scholarship provides Robuck with $196,000 over four
years. She also gets to use NOAA research facilities, and she becomes an
ambassador for NOAA’s marine sanctuaries division.
“The
Nancy Foster Scholarship program is extremely competitive so it’s gratifying to
see Anna recognized in such a prominent way,” says David Smith, associate dean
of GSO. “NOAA has made a wise decision investing in Anna’s future. Not only is
she passionate about her research she is also passionate about engaging people,
particularly young people, in recognizing some of our most pressing
environmental issues.”
The
scholarship was established in memory of Nancy Foster, a former NOAA
administrator, past director of the agency’s National Ocean Service, and a
well-respected marine conservationist. Congress created the scholarship after
Foster’s death in 2000 to honor her and increase the number of women and
minorities in oceanography and ocean-related fields.
Robuck
joined the laboratory of GSO Oceanographer Rainer Lohmann in 2015 after
receiving her master’s degree in marine science from the University of North
Carolina at Wilmington. Lohmann is an internationally recognized expert in
marine pollutants, especially highly fluorinated organic chemicals that have
been in rain-proofing materials and products such as firefighting foam and
nonstick coatings for more than 60 years.
Robuck’s
research is cutting-edge and timely: Scientists are only beginning to understand
how these organic pollutants travel in the environment and how they’re harmful
to marine creatures, as well as humans. In fact, some studies link the
pollutants to autoimmune diseases and kidney cancer in humans.
While
pursuing her master’s, Robuck worked as a research assistant for the Lower Cape
Fear River Program, a major environmental and water quality program in North
Carolina. There, she learned that the health of human and animal communities is
closely tied to the cleanliness of waterways.
“I
don’t think we’ve even scratched the surface of understanding how important it
is to have clean water,” she says. “These chemical pollutants are invisible so
it’s kind of out of sight, out of mind. That’s a risky attitude. We need to pay
attention to what we’re putting in our water. These chemicals can be very
harmful.”
Outside
the lab, Robuck spends her free time volunteering at the Wildlife Clinic of
Rhode Island, diving, surfing and hanging out with Gypsy, her Doberman
Pinscher. “I’m an outdoor person who loves the Earth and wants to see it
flourish,” she says. “That’s what motivates me, that’s what keeps me going.”