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I am responsible for courses in General Zoology (Bio 217), Marine Biology (Bio 313), Comparative Vertebrate Anatomy (Bio 357), and Functional Animal Morphology (Bio 457). Specific projects open to students as thesis research in the Liquid Life Laboratory include dolphin swimming, morphology and kinematics of locomotion, energy conservation by formation swimming, metabolic energetics of swimming and terrestrial locomotion, biomechanics of maneuverability, jet propulsion in fish, and functional design of propulsive structures in aquatic vertebrates.

I am also involved with teaching at the Shoals Marine Laboratory (SML) on Appledore Island, Maine. For my first summer at SML (2007), I was part of a team that taught the course A Marine Approach to Introductory Biology. Students performed projects on motion analysis of walking in gull chicks of different age and estimation of the force necessary to break mussel shells. For summer 2008, I taught Anatomy and Function of Marine Vertebrates with Dr. William Bemis. In this course, students were able to dissect lampreys and sharks and necropsy phocid seals and dolphins.


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