Laura McFarlane Tranquilla: Ph.D. Student
My research interests in avian ecology started while doing my BSc. at the University of New Brunswick, where I spent my summers studying songbird territory size in the blackfly-infested forests of New Brunswick. During this time, I was lucky enough to spend some time on Kent and Machias Seal Islands, where I was immediately captivated by the idea of working on seabirds. Since then, I have happily weathered remote fieldwork on rocky coastlines and stormy seabird islands, on both east and west coasts of Canada, catching and observing seabirds, sticking my arms into seabird burrows (up to the armpits in dirt) and have been chomped, scratched, and regurgitated upon by puffins, razorbills, murres, murrelets, auklets, and petrels.
Fieldwork aside, my research interests are broadly centered on seabird ecology, physiology, and conservation. During my MSc. at the Center for Wildlife Ecology at Simon Fraser University, I studied breeding timing, egg production, and stress responses of Marbled Murrelets. Since finishing my masters, I have worked in association with the Canadian Wildlife Service managing seabird databases, and writing and editing scientific papers, technical reports, and handbooks discussing the ecology and biology of marine birds.
I am delighted to be starting PhD studies in the Montevecchi lab at MUN in association with the IPY project. My research will focus on winter movement ecology of Thick-billed and Common Murres using data collected from tracking devices. I also plan to integrate winter movement ecology with trophic level associations and murre body condition.