Nicole Hack

Nicole grew up in Los Angeles county but spent many weekends at beaches in Santa Barbara. It was here where she grew to love the ocean. Nicole pursued her dreams of diving by attending University of California Santa Cruz (UCSC) where she gained her AAUS scientific diving certification. In 2013, she was selected to participate in a Nation Science Foundation funded Research Education for Undergraduates at Friday Harbor Marine Laboratories in Washington state. Nicole worked closely with Professor Vikram Iyengar on cohabitation (aggregation) behavior in the beach-dwelling earwig, Anisolabis maritima. She is currently working with Salvador Jorgenson at Monterey Bay Aquarium on white shark diving behavior, as well as leading a dive project to create a baseline study on a partially submerged naval vessel being used as an artificial reef in Aptos, California. Working in conjunction with the Art department and the Ecology and Evolutionary Biology department at UCSC, this baseline study will be used to create a novel art park that will educate the public about ocean health. She is determined to establish and maintain sustainable fisheries by becoming a fisheries biologist working with governmental and nongovernmental organizations.

Intern Date:
2014
Location of Internship:
COARE

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2013 AAUS Scientific Diving

Full Face Mask Training and Rockfish Surveys

In an effort to document changes in Northwest rockfish populations, Oregon Coast Aquarium has collaborated with the Seattle Aquarium and Point Defiance Zoo to survey rockfish populations in the Pacific Northwest.  I was eager to participate

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2010 National Park Service

Isle Royale National Park

To make my way to my next destination, Isle Royale, I met Susanna Pershern from the Submerged Resources Center (SRC) at the St. Croix National Scenic River headquarters in Wisconsin. We drove to her brother’s house to meet

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2022 National Park Service

New places and faces: the start of a grand adventure

It’s mid-March – a late weekday evening. I’ve returned home after a long day in the lab, refining the molecular assay I’ve been working on and troubleshooting for months as part of my Master’s thesis research.

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