Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Summer Course Schedule for 2014, almost there


From: Jon Garbisch,

Here it is our first pass at what will be offered at Cedar Point Biological Station, summer 2014.  Yes, no guarantee at this point that we will not make changes.  Yes, we have added two new courses; PHOT 161and Field Herpetology NRES 374.  I believe both of these are very close to 100% for sure.  I also believe they will fill early. We try to have these finalized by the first week of November and I will gladly take a deposit at that point.  You can certainly tell us now that you want a space saved of course and I'll confirm in early November.  Our room and board costs will remain the same; $575 for 3 weeks.

1st  session, 18 May to 6 June 2014

BIOS 475 / 875 Ornithology, John Faaborg 

LIFE 121 Organismic Biology, William Glider – ACE4

2nd session, 8 – 27 June 2014

BIOS/NRES 474/874 Herpetology, Dennis Ferraro 

BIOS 468 / 868 Field Animal Behavior, Daizaburo Shizuka  (ACE10)

PHOT 161  Digital (Landscape) Photography for Non-majors, Allen Morris – ACE7 (Dept. of Art and Art History is listing this course and only June 8-21)

Also most probably during that session:  EPSCoRE Young Nebraska Scientist 8 – 14 June and then Keith Co. middle school science workshops.

3rd session, 29 June – 18 July 2014

BIOS 452 / 852  Field Epidemiology, Devin Nickol – ACE10

BIOS 422 / 822 Comparative Physiology, Gwen Bachman – ACE10

4th session 20 July – 8 August 2014

BIOS 487 / 887 Field Parasitology, Scott Gardner – ACE10

BIOS 207 Ecology and Evolution, Chad Brassil


Monday, August 19, 2013

A Breath of Fresh Air-icca

Article By: Johnica Morrow

Cedar Point would like to welcome it's newest staff member: Mrs. Airicca Roddy!  Airicca has been hired to fill a number of roles here at the station.  She will be working on data management for our library and scientific collections as well as serving as the station's librarian.  In the off season, she will be doing promotional/public relations work for the station.  In addition to her many other hats, she will be wearing that of the Head Chief and Kitchen Manager.  She is currently in the process of hiring kitchen staff for the 2014 field season.

Airicca comes to us from College Station, Texas, where she has been working in a bakery for the last year.  Prior to her work in College Station, Airicca was a librarian at the Burkburnett City Library in Burkburnett, Texas.  Airicca holds a bachelors of science degree in Organismal Biology from Midwestern State University in Wichita Falls, Texas.  Airicca also has public outreach experience from her involvement with Bark for Life and Rockys Creek Ranch and Horse Rescue among a few other non-profits.  Airicca will be living in Lincoln while her husband, Nathan Roddy, works on his master's degree in hydrology.  Other members of the Roddy family include their cat, Luna, and their dog, Ninja.  

Airicca has many exciting plans for the CPBS kitchen, including an initiative to serve food that is not only delicious, but also healthy.  Airicca has a passion for food and she loves experimenting with ways to make yummy foods less bad for you.  She is also hoping to find ways to make the station more sustainable in terms of how the kitchen is run.

The following is a brief interview with Airicca about her plans for CPBS.

1) What plans do you have for managing scientific resources at CPBS?

Soon we will be in the process of creating a searchable database in RefWorks that should be accessible from our homepage.  You will be able to search for bibliographic information published that relates to research conducted here at Cedar Point.  This information will be useful for students taking classes and working on research projects at the station.  Our long-term goal is to have full papers digitally available for students, but we will start with providing a working research bibliography before getting to that point.

2) How will you be involved with promotional work for the station?

I will be working closely with our Associate Director, Jon Garbisch, to recruit UNL students for classes and as summer workers here at Cedar Point.

3) What changes can students and researchers expect next summer in terms of their dining experience at CPBS?

Well, as I'm from Texas, you can certainly expect less traditional Nebraskan foods. (*She laughs*)  Let's start with my favorite meal, breakfast!  We are hoping for more than eggs and bacon/sausage every morning.  I'm wanting to expand our breakfast offerings to include things like homemade pancakes, muffins, and french toast once or twice a week.  I'll also be introducing some Tex-mex items such as breakfast tacos and migas.

As far as lunch is concerned, I've heard a lot of complaints from students and staff members about lunches being too heavy.  This makes me feel like we need to be offering lunches that are lighter while still offering all of the calories people need to conduct field work. We are kicking around a lot of ideas about what to serve.  At the moment, I'm thinking about things like herb-citrus roasted chicken, and minestrone.  As always, we will have a full salad bar available for both lunch and dinner, but I'm planning to make more soups available on some of those cool, rainy days in the early and late summer sessions.

Plans for dinner are similar to those for lunch.  We will be trying to give people the fuel for all of the activities they are doing without giving them foods that will bog them down out in the field.  The goal is to have lots of fresh foods available and to home-make as many things as we can.  We want to avoid foods with lots of additives and preservatives which aren't healthy. 

4) On a scale of 1 to super-awesome-ecstatic, how excited are you about working for CPBS?

 Orange hedgehog.

5) Any final thoughts you'd like to leave for those planning to spend part or all of next summer eating your food?

Students, if you are bad, we WILL serve you fruit punch...staff and faculty will laugh at your misfortune as they sip their lemonade in spite of your misery.  Also, if anyone is rude to my staff, they aren't getting dessert!  Seriously, we will be working hard so you guys need to act like courteous adults!

Thanks again for the fun interview, Airicca!  We can't wait to see what you accomplish in your new (multiple) position(s)!  Welcome to CPBS!!!

As mentioned previously, we will be looking to staff the kitchen for next summer with more UNL students! If you are a student interested in working in the kitchen next summer (or fall break of this year!), be sure to shoot Airicca an e-mail at cpbs2@unl.edu. 

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Announcing Occasional Paper #2

Article By: Johnica Morrow

In 2001, Cedar Point decided to publish the first of a series of papers describing the flora and fauna of the station and the surrounding regions.  The series was dubbed the "Occasional Papers of the Cedar Point Biological Station".  The first publication in this series was compiled by Dr. Charles R. Brown and Dr. Mary Bomberger Brown.  This publication was titled Birds of the Cedar Point Biological Station.
Since the first publication, Cedar Point has not published another paper in this series.  The running joke around the station has been that the Birds of Cedar Point Biological Station was one of the very occasional papers.  This summer, we decided to change that by publishing the second paper in the series.

It all started with my love for spiders.  While working on my master's degree at Midwestern State University (Wichita Falls, Texas), I was able to take a rarely offered class in spider biology.  In this class, termed Araneology, we not only learned how these amazing creatures function anatomically and ecologically, we also learned how to collect, curate, and identify them.  I partially took the class because I was afraid of spiders, and my mother always told me that knowledge is power.  It turns out she was right, as most mothers are.  Gaining an understanding of these creepy crawlies made them much less creepy.  I began to see the sheer brilliance and beauty of animals that are all too often killed because we fear them.

Upon arrival to CPBS, I found myself gazing in amazement at the spider diversity.  I wanted to read up on the spiders found here at the station, but no one had ever written a field guide or even documented the diversity here.  I started to collect them and I asked the station's associate director to order me an identification manual.  My hobby collecting turned into a desire to create a working scientific collection of these animals for the station.

As the summer crept on, I managed to collect 157 specimens representing at least 12 known families.  Midway through the summer, things got so busy that I didn't have time to collect and I never got to completely identify my spiders.  However, I did manage to take the time to write up the second paper in the very occasional papers series.  You can expect to see Spider Families of the Cedar Point Biological Station on CPBS shelves next summer at the latest.  You might even be able to swing by Jon Garbisch's office on City Campus for a copy in the next few months if he gets them to the printer soon!

The paper briefly covers each of the families encountered this summer and is intended to be expanded upon in the years to come.  The collection of spiders now exists as a permanent part of the CPBS Non-Insect Arthropod Collection.  Hopefully next summer myself, or perhaps someone more qualified, will be able to identify what we have and contribute to the growth of the collection with their own specimens.  Knowing what we have is an important part of understanding the ecosystems around the station.  Though it is not easy to find ways to fund biodiversity studies or curatorial scientists, it is important to do so.  

Today, the collection was created and will be maintained by volunteers, but perhaps in the future some small endowment will be created for students interested in museum studies or maybe even spider biology in general.  I would love to see my work continued by budding professionals just as I would love to see the growth of our station's scientific collections.  After all, good scientific collections and publications are the marks of great research stations, and we can all agree that Cedar Point Biological Station should remain amongst those considered great.  

To donate to our efforts in expanding our collections and keeping them maintained, please contact Jon Garbisch at cpbs@unl.edu. Thanks in advance for your support!

Monday, August 5, 2013

The Detwiler Piano – A History

Article By: J. Janovy, Jr.

When CPBS opened, in 1975, there was an old, green, upright piano downstairs in the lodge. Once and a while students played on it but eventually it disappeared, probably removed by the first director of CPBS, Dr. Brent Nickol. During the 1990s, the School of Biological Sciences revised its curriculum, removing both BIOS 112 (Zoology) and BIOS 109 (Botany) from the list of courses applicable to a degree, and began requiring Cell Structure and Function (BIOS 203) and Biodiversity (BIOS 204) as core majors’ courses. Because of the academic politics involved in these decisions, I volunteered to teach the spring section of BIOS 204, which I did for about 10 years. BIOS 204, Biodiversity, was changed to BIOS 103, Organismic Biology, for a variety of reasons (and BIOS 203 was changed to BIOS 102). One of those last semesters when I taught BIOS 204, however, there was a student in that class named Jillian Detwiler, from Rapid City, South Dakota. The Detwiler Piano is named for Jill.

During those years in BIOS 204, students wrote four papers, all being three double-spaced pages plus bibliography, without once mentioning money, health, agriculture, politics, sex, sports, or religion. A complete discussion of writing assignments in large classes can be found at www.johnjanovy.com/fieltst1.htm. Here are the papers Jill’s class wrote that semester, well before the Internet and Google made student writing so boring:

First paper assignment:

 (1) You will be issued a scientific name.  This name represents your personal and individual study organism for the papers this semester.

 (2) Analyze the taxonomic and phylogenetic information available in the original scientific literature on the genus of this organism, i.e. in the journal articles published over the past century.  In particular, be sure to address the question of whether the taxonomic information is of any value in answering phylogenetic questions.  Convince me that you have learned how to use Biological Abstracts and the Zoological Record, and that you have actually read and understood some original scientific papers.

 (3) Remember, this paper is mainly an exercise to teach you how to use (= find, read, and understand) the literature of biological diversity and how to write in taxonomic and phylogenetic terms.

 (4) The paper must be three full pages of double-spaced typing, 12-point font, 1” margins, plus at least 5 original journal article references (4th page) in the correct format (see Blackboard for editorial policies).

Second paper assignment:

(1) Answer the questions: Who are these scientists that did the research and wrote the references you cited in your first paper?  Under what circumstances did they do their research and produce their papers? What can you infer about their daily lives from reading the materials and methods sections of those papers you cited? Can you envision doing similar kinds of research as an undergraduate honors thesis?

(2) For the literature cited section of this paper, add another five references from the book and journal literature. Your bibliography pages should contain your references from the first paper, marked with an asterisk (*), then five additional references. You may also cite up to five web sources IN ADDITION to the real library resources. If you cite web sites, then also add a paragraph indicating why you chose those sites, based on the advice given by the library’s web site link to use and evaluation of web resources.

(3) The paper must be three double-spaced typed pages. All the format rules still apply (see the Blackboard site for this course).

Third Paper Assignment:

(1) Define and explain the term “conceptual problem” as it applies to biodiversity (100 words or less).

(2) Determine the three major conceptual problems that have yet to be addressed concerning the FAMILY of organisms to which your genus belongs. Explain exactly why these problems are conceptual ones, rather than practical or economic ones. Illustrate your answers with at least five additional references from the original literature or from books on the general subject that includes your genus, making sure to mark with an asterisk (*) the references already used in your first two papers. It's okay to refer back to the papers used for your first two papers.

(3) The main body of the paper must be a minimum of three double-spaced pages with one inch margins. The bibliography is extra.

Instructor comments on paper number 3 (from Blackboard):

Here is the assignment, all with some expanded commentary:

(1) Define and explain the term “conceptual problem” as it applies to biodiversity (100 words or less).

The first thing I would do is simply look up “conceptual” in your dictionary. The second thing I would do (I’m NOT being sarcastic here!) is to look up the word “problem.” I find that very often students, including graduate students who should know better, simply fail to address the question that is asked, and instead try to answer questions that were not asked. So it’s important to know what a conceptual problem is, and it is very important for you personally to decide what a conceptual problem is relative to your genus and its relatives. Here are some examples of conceptual problems, problems that were or could be addressed in various ways, some of which we are now familiar with:

a. Is “separate but equal” a valid solution to race relations in the United States? This is a conceptual problem because “separate but equal” is an idea about how to establish a particular social order and distribute economic opportunity.

b. Are species fixed entities? This is a conceptual problem because “fixed entities” is an idea about the fundamental nature of categories we call species.

c. What is the nature of proof? This is a conceptual problem because “proof” can mean different things, depending on whether one is dealing with a mathematical theorem, a criminal case, a historical event (~ a criminal case), a political campaign promise, or an argument in a bar.

(2) Determine the three major conceptual problems that have yet to be addressed concerning the FAMILY of organisms to which your genus belongs. Explain exactly why these problems are conceptual ones, rather than practical or economic ones. Illustrate your answers with at least five additional references from the original literature or from books on the general subject that includes your genus, making sure to mark with an asterisk (*) the references already used in your first two papers. It's okay to refer back to the papers used for your first two papers.

Wow, this is a fairly difficult assignment! This sounds about like something I would ask a PhD candidate to accomplish! Obviously I’m asking you to stretch your minds, step up a notch in your intellectual sophistication, and act like the student from hell. However, to be brutally honest with you, about all I’m asking you to do is try to think and write like the undergraduates I have known at UNL who have gone on to very successful careers, most of them in the health professions. Just as obviously, there is a whole lot of flexibility in this part of the assignment, and when I grade the papers, I’ll simply ask: are there three problems, do these problems address ideas, and are some papers cited to support the student’s claim that the problems are actually problems? I chose the family level to give you some additional flexibility by enlarging the subject. This part of the paper is really nothing more than an upscale version of the question sets you’ve been producing in lab all semester.

(3) The main body of the paper must be a minimum of three double-spaced pages with one-inch margins. The bibliography is extra. This part of the assignment is fairly self-explanatory.

When I look at the grade roster of this class, I discover that nearly half of the students have an 85% average or higher. In any other class at this university, such an average would indicate either an unusually brilliant group of students or an unusually easy class. I’m not completely convinced this class is all that easy, and from reading your last exam answers, I’m not convinced that as a group you are thinking like an unusually brilliant group even though your grades suggest that is the case. So all I’m trying to do with this third paper is bring your independent thinking habits up to the level of your grades. Remember the pedagogical theory of this particular biodiversity section. I ask that students do activities that are in and of themselves educational, I try to design activities that accomplish the educational goal of producing students who have the biodiverstist’s habits of mind, and I allow a whole lot of individual freedom to accomplish the task in your own individual way (thus each of you get a different genus). I’m asking that you be a biologist for a semester, instead of take biology for a semester, and I’m giving you as many options for succeeding as there are human beings trying to succeed.

Fourth Paper Assignment:

For the last paper this semester, you are to use the resources in the Sheldon Gallery and in the Sculpture Garden that is spread across city campus.

(1) Critically evaluate the illustrations used in the taxonomic literature about your genus (one page maximum), providing commentary on the quality of illustrations, the media used, and the visual communication techniques employed.

(2) Pick five pieces from the Sheldon or the Sculpture garden in at least three media (oil, watercolor, photography, collage, sculpture, etc.) and tell how a study of those pieces would help you in communicating specific information about your genus (two pages minimum). As an aid in doing this, assume you must give an hour’s presentation to our class and need to find creative ways to keep your fellow students awake, alert, and vitally interested in the subject.

(3) There is no need to find additional bibliographic references unless the ones you already have do not allow you to answer (1) of this assignment. Be sure to cite in the text those that you do use, however. In the literature cited section, also list the artist, date, medium, size (if given), and ownership of the pieces of art you use in (2), and cite them by name and date as you would a scientific paper. If you wish to describe any of these pieces, then do it in the literature cited instead of in the paper itself.

On the basis of their writing, I called in a number of students to ask about their future plans. I had been doing this for decades, making sure that students had set their career goals high enough when their performance in my classes indicated they had potential for magnificent careers in a variety of fields. One of the students I called in, because her writing was so insightful, was Jill Detwiler. During the conversation, I suggested, very strongly, that she attend CPBS and take Field Parasitology, which I taught. Field Parasitology always seemed to go better when I recruited at least a few serious students out of the freshman classes, and Jill was a first-year student at the time.

Jill responded by telling me that she was a double major, piano performance and biology, and that she had to practice several hours a day, so she couldn’t come to Cedar Point. I asked whether she’d come to CPBS and take my course if we bought her a piano, and she just laughed and said "sure". I was director of CPBS at the time, so right after that conversation I went into the office of Mary Batterson, who was the associate director (the position now held by Jon Garbisch), put $50 cash in an envelope, wrote “Detwiler Piano” on the envelope, and asked Mary to send out an e-mail to faculty members associated with CPBS, asking for donations. Within a week, we had $500. Mary called the music store in Ogallala and had the piano delivered. I told Jill we’d bought her a piano, and she had no choice but to come out that summer and take Field Parasitology. However, you had to be awake at 2:00 AM to hear her play. The music was worth staying up all night.

Jill spent that first summer at CPBS, doing her project on larval trematodes in snails. She spent the next summer at the California Academy of Sciences, the summer after that traveling around Nebraska working on parasites of prairie dogs for Nebraska Game and Parks, and the next summer doing research for her MS degree, which she received at UNL. The major paper from her thesis is:

Detwiler, J., and J. Janovy, Jr. 2008. The role of phylogeny and ecology in experimental host specificity: insights from a eugregarine-host system. Journal of Parasitology 94: 7-12.

She then went to Purdue for her PhD, working on the evolutionary biology and population dynamics of echinostomes with Dennis Minchella, and did her post-doc at Texas A&M under Charles Criscione. She has just started as a faculty member at the University of Manitoba. She was the 2012 winner of the American Society of Parasitologists Young Investigator Award, an exceedingly prestigious honor. Her complete CV (as of 2010) can be found at

If any of you can play the piano, I strongly suggest sitting down at the Detwiler Piano the next time you are at CPBS.

Friday, August 2, 2013

A Flurry of Familiar Faces

Article By: Johnica Morrow

Today CPBS has been graced by the presence of a number of alumni.  It is wonderful to have people visit the station and share their stories from the time that they spent here.  Some of these familiar faces have come for research...others have come just to have lunch and see how much has changed since they waved good-bye to that old white gate so many years ago.  

Dr. Matt Bolek wore many hats during his time here at Cedar Point.  He was a student, a TA, and later an instructor for a number of field courses.  He is now a member of the faculty at Oklahoma State University, carrying on his parasite research from his years as a UNL student.  He and one of his PhD students, Kyle Gustafson, arrived at the station early this morning.  After a light rest, the two parasitologists headed out to collect frogs for their research.  Both Matt and Kyle will return to CPBS to attend the Rocky Mountain Conference of Parasitologists which the station will be hosting in September.  

1981 CPBS alum, Joe Frost, stands next to former
director/retired SBS faculty member, Dr. Kathy Keeler.
Another familiar face that could been seen today was that of Dr. Kathy Keeler.  Kathy spent many years here studying red harvester ant (Pogonomyrmex barbatus) colonies.  She traveled here today for a yearly check-up on these colonies.  A long time lover of Cedar Point, Dr. Keeler taught courses such as ecology and botany prior to her retirement.  She also served as the station's director from 1991-1994.  Dr. Keeler maintains a blog called A Wandering Botanist, which can be found here.  Be sure to check it out!

Fortuitously, another familiar face (and former student of Dr. Keeler's) was found floating around today.  Joe Frost, a CPBS alumni, happened to be in the Ogallala area and popped in today for lunch and a lively conversation.  Joe was here at the station in 1981 taking courses in Field Ecology (taught by Dr. Keeler) and Field Parasitology (taught by Dr. Janovy).  Over a delicious lunch of sloppy joes (appropriately!), he chatted with the director and associate director of CPBS about all the new things happening here at the station and about how the station really needs a Friends of Cedar Point to help us support ongoing restoration projects and improvements.  We were happy to have him swing in for a visit!

We'd be happy to have you swing by sometime too!  If you are ever in the area and find yourself with some free time, give us a call at 308-284-6501 or send us a quick e-mail at cpbs@unl.edu.  We will arrange a time for you to learn all about the changes since your last visit and for you to tell us all about your Cedar Point experience!  Hope to see you soon!