The Beltran lab leads a population monitoring effort of northern elephant seals at Año Nuevo Reserve, a 30-minute drive north of UCSC. The overarching goal of the program is to maintain a population of uniquely tagged seals for demographic, behavioral, and physiological research. We are looking for highly motivated and reliable students who are passionate about ecology and evolution. As part of the program, students will learn valuable research skills and knowledge from existing graduate students, program assistants, postdocs, and faculty members in the program.

Undergraduate students have the opportunity to participate in on-going research and lab efforts in two different capacities – A Spring quarter field course (BIOE 128L) or a year-long field assistant position.


BIOE 128L – LARGE MARINE VERTEBRATE FIELD COURSE

The large marine vertebrate field course is a great way to explore our research in a short-term capacity to see if our on-going research efforts align with your own research interests and academic goals. The course combines lectures and a fieldwork component in which students work closely with existing lab members at Año Nuevo Reserve. Field course students participate in weekly fieldwork (~7 weeks) and assist with flipper tag and mark resights of northern elephant seals and instrumentation procedures of juvenile-adult seals. The field course also involves the creation and completion of an independent research project that will contribute to a class-wide manuscript intended for publication. Previous BIOE 128L students are sometimes invited to join the lab as field assistants in our undergraduate cohort the following year.