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1.  Contact and meet with one of the following faculty members:
 
1.  Contact and meet with one of the following faculty members:
  
'''Plants:''' Cindy Johnson ([mailto:cindy@gustavus.edu cindy@gustavus.edu]) or Pamela Kittelson ([mailto:pkittels@gustavus.edu])<br/>
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'''Plants:''' Cindy Johnson ([mailto:cindy@gustavus.edu cindy@gustavus.edu]) or Pamela Kittelson ([mailto:pkittels@gustavus.edu pkittels@gustavus.edu])<br/>
 
'''Vertebrates:''' Jon Grinnell ([mailto:grinnell@gustavus.edu grinnell@gustavus.edu]) or Eric Elias ([mailto:eelias@gustavus.edu eelias@gustavus.edu])<br/>
 
'''Vertebrates:''' Jon Grinnell ([mailto:grinnell@gustavus.edu grinnell@gustavus.edu]) or Eric Elias ([mailto:eelias@gustavus.edu eelias@gustavus.edu])<br/>
'''Invertebrates:''' Margaret Bloch Qazi ([mailto:mqazi@gustavus.edu mqazi@gustavus.edu])or Yuta Kawarasaki ([mailto:ykawaras@gustavus.edu])<br/>
+
'''Invertebrates:''' Margaret Bloch Qazi ([mailto:mqazi@gustavus.edu mqazi@gustavus.edu])or Yuta Kawarasaki ([mailto:ykawaras@gustavus.edu ykawaras@gustavus.edu])<br/>
  
 
2.  With your faculty collaborator, develop a short proposal in which you:
 
2.  With your faculty collaborator, develop a short proposal in which you:

Revision as of 09:49, 8 September 2015

The Biology Department at 鶹Ƶ curates diverse collections of organisms including plants, vertebrate animals and invertebrate animals.

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The Rubert Anderson Award in Systematics

A great way to learn about organismal diversity is to work with a specimen collection. The 鶹Ƶ Biology Department has several opportunities to work with plant and animal collections! In order to share our insect, plant, and vertebrate collections with a larger community we are in the process of organizing and displaying information, including images, about the specimens in our collections on a newly-designed website. This site will serve as a resource for classes at 鶹Ƶ, the St. Peter community, and scientists.

Collections are a vital component of scientific study and education with uses including:

  • cataloguing diversity within a taxon
  • recording species found within a particular geographic range
  • understanding evolutionary change with and between populations

The Rubert Anderson Award in Systematics is an annual award that is granted to faculty-student collaborators to conduct work with one of the department collections. Faculty-student collaborators develop and submit a short proposal in which they outline their plans to curate and present a portion of a collection on-line.

This award is an opportunity for you to contribute to the department’s educational objectives and learn about a particular taxon.

To apply:

1. Contact and meet with one of the following faculty members:

Plants: Cindy Johnson (cindy@gustavus.edu) or Pamela Kittelson (pkittels@gustavus.edu)
Vertebrates: Jon Grinnell (grinnell@gustavus.edu) or Eric Elias (eelias@gustavus.edu)
Invertebrates: Margaret Bloch Qazi (mqazi@gustavus.edu)or Yuta Kawarasaki (ykawaras@gustavus.edu)

2. With your faculty collaborator, develop a short proposal in which you:

  • clearly state what informational content and how much of the collection will be posted online by the end of the award period
  • describe what archival work needs to be done to support #1 (above) and what you intend to accomplish in one semester
  • Submit an itemized budget for no more than $160 to support your work. Money can be used to: travel to see collections at other institutions, purchase supplies to present or archive specimens, and acquire texts related to the collection subject

3. Three copies of the proposal are due to Eric Elias (NHS 221B) by 5:00 PM Friday, October 2, 2015. Successful applicants will be notified the following week.


Students will be expected to present their project at an appropriate venue determined by their faculty sponsor and complete an exit interview. Students successfully completing the proposed work will be recognized at Honors Day.


2014 Award Recipient: No applicants.
2013 Award Recipient: Andrea Gruver; Distribution of Hymenoptera Parasitoids over Time.
2012 Award Recipients: No applicants. Bio 376 Entomolgy students worked in the insect collection in lieu of a winning proposal.
2011 Award Recipient: No applicants.
2010 Award Recipients: Ryan Ortlip and Lucas Youngvorst; Hamrum collection of Odonates.
2009 Award Recipients: Josh Hammer and Carl Stenoien; 鶹Ƶ Freshwater and Marine Fish Collection: Enhancement of the collection by additions and replacements of local species and creation of a web-based digital archive.
2008 Award Recipients: Elias Anoszko, Stephanie Erlandson, Kirsten Ruser & Karen Katz; Archiving herbarium specimens of historical value and developing a web-based botanical collection.