Update

Now Archived! PolarConnect event with David Walker and researcher Rose Cory studying Carbon in the Arctic from Toolik Field Station in Alaska. This event was broadcast on Wednesday, 26 June 2019. You can access this and other events on the PolarConnect Archives site

What Are They Doing?

A C-OPS instrument (Compact-Optical Profiling System)
A C-OPS instrument (Compact-Optical Profiling System) is used by Dr. Rose Cory's lab to measure wavelengths of sunlight. Photo by Regina Brinker.
Understanding how microbes and sunlight interact is particularly important in the Arctic where thawing permafrost soils will release large amounts of carbon from land to water. Advancing our understanding of loss of this carbon to the atmosphere is critical to understanding the global carbon cycle. This project takes advantage of recent advances in microbial genomics and carbon chemistry to improve understanding of carbon cycling in Arctic freshwaters. The research team will be looking to answer three questions: 1) How is microbial metabolism controlled by dissolved organic carbon (DOC) chemistry? 2) How does DOC exposure to sunlight change how microbes convert DOC to carbon dioxide (CO2) 3) How does the longer-term adaptation of microbial communities affect the rate of DOC conversion to carbon dioxide?

Where Are They?

The tundra landscape at Toolik Field Station, Alaska. Photo by Nell Kemp.
The tundra landscape at Toolik Field Station, Alaska. Photo by Nell Kemp.
The research team will be based out of Toolik Field Station located in the northern foothills of the Brooks Range in northern Alaska. Toolik Field Station is operated by the Institute of Arctic Biology at the University of Alaska Fairbanks and has hosted hundreds of researchers and students every year since 1975. Research sites will be accessed by hiking, vehicle and helicopter.

Latest Journals

PolarConnect, Toolik Farewell, and Next Steps Fairbanks, AKJune 30, 2019 Video of the Day: Earlier this week, Dr. Rose Cory and I were able to present the work from this past month via internet livestream as a PolarTREC PolarConnect Event. Many thanks to PolarTREC for recording our presentation…
Photo-Bio Part 7: Preliminary Results Toolik Field Station, North Slope, AKJune 29, 2019 Photo of the Day: Muskox (Ovibos moschatus) with calves. Pump Station 3, North Slope, AK. As a preface to this post, you’ll benefit from reading my overview of the photo-bio project. It’s important to pay…
Birds of the North Slope Toolik Field Station, North Slope, AKJune 28, 2019 Photo of the Day: Birding with Seth Beaudreault of the Toolik Field Station Environmental Data Center. North Slope, AK. I have been doing a great deal of birding in my free time up here in the Arctic. One of my…
DOC Characterization via Mass Spectrometry Toolik Field Station, North Slope, AKJune 26, 2019 Video of the Day: A small group of caribou woke me up from a nap on the tundra just north of the Brooks Range. Amazing animals to observe at such close range! As a preface to this post, you’ll…
Dates
-
Location
Toolik Field Station, Alaska
Project Funded Title
Collaborative Research: Coupled Biological and Photochemical Degradation of Dissolved Organic Carbon in the Arctic
David Walker - Educator
Educator
LASA High School

David Walker teaches innovative courses in Earth Science and Organic Chemistry at LASA High School, a public magnet school in Austin, Texas. His favorite thing about teaching is having the opportunity to make the natural world more interesting for his students every day. This opportunity is his passion point, and it constantly motivates him to improve. An avid backpacker, fly fisherman, and birder, he loves to bring his experiences, personal knowledge, and insights to life in engaging, meaningful learning activities for his students.

David advocates a project- and place-based teaching model and encourages his students to investigate nature through unique field trips and research projects in Austin-area laboratories, parks, and preserves. He also coaches the LASA Science Olympiad team, through which he has helped inspire students to study science beyond classroom requirements and expose students to many scientific fields and disciplines not typically encountered in high school.

David plans to directly integrate his research experience in the Arctic into his classroom. In doing so, he hopes to enrich his curriculum with a wealth of relatable personal experiences, enhance the project-based field research components of his courses, expose his students to unique careers and fields in science, and inspire his students to seek out additional learning opportunities outside of the classroom.

Rose Cory - Researcher
Researcher
University of Michigan

Dr. Rose Cory works in the Arctic where climate warming is thawing frozen soil which may release tremendous stores of dissolved organic carbon to the Earth's surface. After having been trapped for millennia in the frozen soils this new carbon then becomes part of the modern carbon cycle. Dr. Cory finds that exposure to sunlight accelerates the return of this dissolved organic carbon to the atmosphere as carbon dioxide, which may further increase the rate of global warming. Because climate change is influencing our planet's evolution, understanding the fate of newly released carbon will help predict our future as a planet and society. Read more about Dr. Cory and her research here

George Kling - Researcher
Researcher
University of Michigan

George W. Kling is a professor in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at the University of Michigan. He primarily studies aquatic ecology and biogeochemistry, and his research has focused on carbon and nutrient cycling, on using stable isotopes to understand trophic interactions, and on the integration of lakes and streams in a landscape context. His recent research has examined the role of microbial diversity in ecosystem function. He has worked internationally on arctic lakes and streams for approximately 25 years, and on tropical lakes in Africa.

Kling's scientific outreach to the public through interviews about his research on climate change and on the killer lakes of Cameroon includes articles in magazines and newspapers (e.g., National Geographic, Smithsonian), T.V. and radio broadcasts (e.g., CNN, BBC), and television films (e.g., BBC, Discovery). He has met regularly with U.S. Congress members to discuss issues of climate change and scientific integrity, and was lead author of the Union of Concerned Scientists – Ecological Society of America publication 'Confronting Climate Change in the Great Lakes Region' (2003). Kling is an associate editor for Limnology and Oceanography (2001-), an elected Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (1997-), and received a National Academy of Science Young Investigator Award (1993), a NSF Presidential Faculty Fellowship (1995), the United Nations Sasakawa Award (Certificate for Disaster Reduction, 2001), and the ASLO Ruth Patrick Award (2007).

Byron Crump - Researcher
Researcher
Oregon State University

Dr. Byron Crump has worked in the Arctic for over a decade exploring the biodiversity and ecology of bacteria and other microbes in lakes, streams and soils. Microbial communities are essential components of every ecosystem on the planet, and in recent years we have learned that the most abundant organisms in natural microbial communities are unrelated to the cultured organisms studied in the lab for the last 100 years. Microbial communities contain an extremely deep diversity and an immense genomic potential of novel functional genes. Dr. Crump is currently conducting a multi-year study of microbial community composition and growth rate in arctic lakes and streams on the North Slope of Alaska to measure how diversity and growth vary over time and are affected by global change. You can read more about Dr. Crump's research here.

Carbon in the Arctic Resources

Feature story on David Walker's Carbon in the Arctic expedition and permafrost science in the Spring 2020 issue of The Classroom Teacher, the quarterly magazine of the Texas Classroom Teachers Association. Article begins on page 12.

Overview

This activity was prepared by David Walker (LASA High School) and Rose Cory (University of Michigan), based on work conducted at Toolik Field Station in Alaska. The purpose is to introduce students to Van Krevelen diagrams, which are used to interpret results of high resolution mass spectrometry and characterize the compound classes present in complex organic mixtures. Students will

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Arctic
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Overview

This activity was prepared by David Walker (LASA High School) and Rose Cory (University of Michigan), based on work conducted during summer 2019 at Toolik Field Station in Alaska. The purpose is to expose students to photooxidation, one of the main pathways by which organic molecules in Arctic streams are oxidized into carbon dioxide. Different teas will be used

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Arctic
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The work of professor Bryon Crump, graduate student Natasha Christman, and PolarTREC teacher David Walker is highlighted in the weekly newsletter of the Oregon State University College of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences (On the Horizon).

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PolarTREC teacher David Walker is highlighted in the Fall 2019 issue of ATPE News (Association of Texas Professional Educators).

David Walker in the Fall 2019 issue of ATPE News
David Walker in the Fall 2019 issue of ATPE News

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Arctic
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KUT (Austin's NPR Station) news report (video, article, and radio) on PolarTREC teacher David Walker's Carbon in the Arctic expedition. The story aired on Morning Edition and Texas Standard in late-September, 2019.

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Arctic
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The PolarTREC Field Experience

PolarTREC (Teachers and Researchers Exploring and Collaborating) is a program that pairs US educators with field research experiences in polar regions. The program is managed by the Arctic Research Consortium of the United States (ARCUS) and receives funding from the National Science Foundation (NSF) Office of Polar Programs. The long-term vision of PolarTREC is "to create

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Presentation on David Walker's PolarTREC expedition and research being conducted in the Arctic on thawing permafrost. This presentation was given to LASA High School faculty and staff in Austin, TX on Tuesday, August 13, 2019.

KVUE news video and article on PolarTREC teacher David Walker's Carbon in the Arctic expedition.

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Spectrum News video and article on PolarTREC teacher David Walker's Carbon in the Arctic expedition.

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Austin Monitor news report on PolarTREC teacher David Walker's Carbon in the Arctic expedition.

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Presentation on electron delocalization and color in organic chemistry

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This PolarConnect event with educator David Walker and researcher Rose Cory was broadcast live from Toolik Field Station on 26 June 2019.