Archive for 2012

Marine Scientist Discusses Cod Colonization

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2012

New evidence suggests that Atlantic cod may have the ability to affect entire food webs in both benthic and pelagic marine ecosystems, according to a University of Maine marine scientist, writing in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

“Not only are (cod) strong interactors capable of limiting the abundance of their prey and their prey’s prey, but also the prey themselves may limit the recovery of this predator,” says Robert Steneck of the large carnivore that, prior to overfishing, was “widespread, abundant and possibly the most important predator throughout the coastal regions of the North Atlantic.”
“In most countries where fisheries management exists, the focus is on the dynamics of single species,” says Steneck, “and often there is no consideration of how two or more managed species interact or how such interactions can affect the entire ecosystem.”

In his PNAS commentary published May 14, Steneck points to an event in which an overabundance of Atlantic Cod in the Baltic Sea spilled over into the Gulf of Riga, as reported by a research team led by Michele Casini of the Swedish Board of Fisheries. The “predator pulse” — in-migration of juvenile and adult cod — into the gulf lasted a decade, causing a trophic cascade in the marine food web. Cod ate the herring, causing the herbivorous zooplankton population normally eaten by herring to increase. Because zooplankton consumed phytoplankton, water in the Gulf of Riga cleared, but only for the decade when cod spilled into the region.

This example of successful, albeit serendipitous, cod colonization provides clues as to how cod repopulation occurs and why it isn’t as simple as closing large areas to fishing when Atlantic cod stocks collapse, Steneck contends. In the case of Canada and the United States, fishing managers expected a full recovery of cod stocks within a decade after the closures in the early 1990s; nearly two decades later, cod stocks remain historically low. It is possible that colonization of new or depleted areas occurs by influx of larger cod rather than cod larvae when adjacent populations reach high population densities, which has not happened in New England for at least decades, says Steneck.

Contact: Margaret Nagle, (207) 581-3745

Sculpture Symposium Announces Sculptor-Site Matches

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2012

The Schoodic International Sculpture Symposium (SISS) has named the sculptors for each of the eight sponsor sites that will receive artwork made during this summer’s symposium, which is being held in partnership with the University of Maine.

Each sponsor committee reviewed the portfolios of the eight artists and then selected its top three choices of sculptors that the sponsor felt best matched the site and the spirit of the community. SISS art director Jesse Salisbury made the final match selections.

“This time, as in past symposia, we were able to match each artist with a community that selected that artist as one of their top choices,” Salisbury says. “The final matches are always exciting. There are an amazing variety of artistic styles represented each time, but also the sites for the finished work are very unique and the committees involved all have their own character. Somehow, this merges in the matching process and we are able to match our artists with sites that suit their work and committees that respond to their unique style.”

The sculptor-sponsor matches are as follows:

  • Acadia Hospital – Andreas Von Huene (Woolwich, Maine)
  • City of Bangor – Koichi Ogino (Japan)
  • Husson University – Hwang Seung-Woo (Republic of Korea)
  • City of Old Town – Ton Kalle (Netherlands)
  • Town of Orono – Shan-Chi Teng (Taiwan)
  • UMaine campus (Oxford Hall) – Lee Zih-Cing (Taiwan)
  • UMaine campus (Nutting Hall) – Tim Shay (Old Town, Maine)
  • University of Maine Foundation – Johnny Turner (New Zealand)

This year’s symposium will be held July 22-Aug. 30 and is a partnership between SISS and UMaine. The sculptors will work during their six weeks at UMaine from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. most days of the week in the steam plant parking lot off College Avenue in Orono. The site is free and open to members of the public who want to watch the sculptors at work.

Each sponsor community is doing its own fundraising for SISS. For more information, please contact the following community representatives:

Contact: Tilan Langley, (207) 267-6057 or tilan@schoodicsculpture.org; Jessica Bloch (207) 581-3777 or jessica.bloch@umit.maine.edu

Ancient Rocks Provide Critical Clues About Modern Earthquakes

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2012

At first glance, there’s nothing remarkable about the rocky Maine blueberry field in which University of Maine graduate student Nancy Price does her research. But those rocks are crucial to our understanding about how faults work nearly 10 miles below the surface of the Earth. Indeed, that’s where rocks are supposedly the strongest.

Price’s findings suggest that geophysical assumptions about the strength of faults at different depths may need to be reevaluated. And if we better understand faults, we may be able to better predict the behavior that causes large earthquakes.

Price is studying the Norumbega fault system, a line of ancient faults that cuts across Maine from Calais to Casco Bay. The now extinct faults were seismically active millions of years ago. Today, the Norumbega system is considered an ancient analog for major earthquake faults, such as the San Andreas fault in California and the North Anatolian fault in Turkey, which have produced some of the deadliest quakes in our time.

Like the San Andreas, the Norumbega is a strike-slip fault where only the shallowest parts are exposed or can be reached by drilling. To study deeper fault rocks, an ancient, extinct zone must be found where the depths have been exposed through exhumation and erosion.

Price is studying a part of the Norumbega fault in Windsor, Maine, that more than 300 million years ago was situated about 10 miles below the surface, but is now exposed. In a strike-slip fault, two tectonic plates slide against each other. They do not slide smoothly and stress builds up as the plates snag on each other.

Close to the surface, where the rocks are relatively cold, the plates are brittle and rocks break, easily releasing the stress. Temperature increases with depth in the Earth, and at a certain temperature the rock weakens and stretches like chewing gum. The strongest part of the crust lies at the depth where the rock starts to stretch, but can also still crack, a region called the frictional-viscous transition. This is the depth level Price is studying.

“How this region behaves is the key to how the fault works,” says Price, who earned a master’s degree at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. “If we understood it, we wouldn’t have to rely on how often an earthquake ruptures. We could model the fault based on what we understand of the physics of how the rock will behave and predict what will happen.”

Working with geologist Scott Johnson, chair of UMaine’s Department of Earth Sciences, Price originally set out to model the fault using data collected from hundreds of rock samples that were once in the transition zone. These sheared fault rocks contain thin, gray veins called pseudotachylyte — evidence of ancient earthquakes.

But when Price’s samples revealed more pseudotachylyte than expected, she turned her attention to identifying how much of the rock contained these veins and how this might change assumptions of fault strength at these depths.

Price found the process of pseudotachylyte formation causes the size of the mineral grains in the rock to be smaller and the percentages of the minerals to change, causing the thin gray layer to be weaker than the rest of the rock. If enough pseudotachylyte from earthquakes is created over millions of years, the fault itself becomes weaker than is generally accepted.

“This change in perspective will help drive discussion,” Price says.

Study Finds Humble People are the Most Helpful to Others

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2012

In a three-part research project involving 310 students at Baylor University, UMaine psychology lecturer Jordan LaBouff and colleagues found that people determined to be humble were more willing to donate time and resources to a hypothetical student in need. The results held true even when researchers controlled the study for potential influencers, such as empathy, agreeableness and other personality traits.

LaBouff says the finding is particularly surprising since nearly 30 years of research on helping have demonstrated that the situation — not the person — tends to predict whether someone in need will receive assistance.

The research builds on a growing body of evidence that humility is an important trait that results in a variety of pro-social and positive outcomes, says LaBouff, the lead author of an article on the study, published in The Journal of Positive Psychology.

Report on New Athletics Facility

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2012

UMaine is building a new facility to support the Black Bears’ baseball and softball teams, according to a report in the Bangor Daily News. The facility will be a batting pavilion, funds for which were raised from private donors. The batting facility will be available for use by youth baseball and softball teams in the area, UMaine Athletic Director Steve Abbott said in the story.

Contact: George Manlove, (207) 581-3756

Health Article Cites UMaine Blueberry Research

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2012

The Triton newspaper in Florida cited University of Maine blueberry research in an article about the many health benefits of wild blueberries. The article referred to UMaine research establishing that blueberries have antimicrobial properties that can counter foodborne pathogens like salmonella or E-coli.

Contact: George Manlove, (207) 581-3756

Segal Interviewed for Irish Radio Talk Show

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2012

A telephone interview with University of Maine history professor Howard Segal by Irish radio talk show host Sean Moncrieff of newstalk 106-108 FM was aired May 22. In Part 4 of the program, which is available on the Internet, Segal discussed with Moncrieff the difficulty of creating utopian societies in spite of efforts from early Greece to today, which is the subject of Segal’s new book “Utopias, A Brief History from Ancient Writings to Virtual Communities.”

Contact: George Manlove, (207) 581-3756

UMaine Commits $17,000 in Student Scholarships for MLTI Attendees

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2012

The University of Maine has committed $1,000 in scholarships for 17 students who win a drawing during the 9th Annual Maine Learning Technology Initiative (MLTI) Student Conference Thursday at UMaine. Ten scholarships are bring offered by the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, five from the School of Computing and Information Science, and two from the College of Education and Human Development, for 17 students who commit to attending the University of Maine, apply and are accepted, and enroll after high school.

More than 1,000 middle and high school students from throughout the state will gather at UMaine’s Collins Center for the Arts and other locations on campus for the conference. The conference will feature more than 30 technology-driven, educational sessions led by professionals from as far away as California and as close as University of Maine faculty members. A highlight of the day will be a unique recording adventure involving all of the students creating and playing synchronized music on laptop keyboard programs.

Contact: George Manlove, (207) 581-3756

Camping and Hiking Food Safety

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2012

What is Engineering Technology?

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2012