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Catalina Island w/ David Hutchins {Marine Biology} !!!!!

  • two harbors CA United States (map)

This is a first come first serve trip!!!!! Sign up with your friends using the links above

ARE YOU READY FOR THE DAY TRIP OF A LIFETIME???? On Thursday we’ll be island gyal’s for the day at Catalina Island with Professor David Hutchins. We’ll be taking the Wrigley boat there, going on a guided kayak tour, eat lunch (provided in trip costs) at the Wrigley Institute, and go on a nearby hike before coming back on the boat to campus. The best part is you’ll get to do all of those things for less than the round trip price on the ferry to Catalina if you went on your own.

PSA: We will be riding in a boat for around 1.5 hours there and 1.5 hours back. We do not recommend you come on this trip if you have motion sickness/ sea sickness. Swimming experience is recommended but not required for the kayaking portion.

“We have kayaks, paddles, and personal flotation devices (PFDs) for you to use while you kayak (PFDs are required). Prepare to get wet. You must wear shoes with heel straps and gripping soles. Old tennis shoes, Keen or Chaco sandals are good choices. The WMSC also has water shoes that you can borrow. Flip-flop style shoes without a heel strap are not allowed. We recommend that you also wear a hat and sunscreen for sun protection. There is a place at the waterfront to store your belongings while you kayak.”

PACKING LIST:

  • attire for 64 degrees low, 69 degrees high

  • hiking shoes/running shoes/athletic sneakers

  • water

  • Any medications you need (esp for motion sickness)

  • snacks for the boat ride

  • long pants are best for the hike



Professor David Hutchin’s research interests concern marine phytoplankton biology and nutrient and carbon cycling. His recent and current projects include extensive investigations into the role of iron and other trace metals as biologically limiting nutrients in the ocean, and factors that affect the establishment of destructive blooms of harmful and toxic algae. New projects in regions like the Bering Sea, the North Atlantic, and the seas around Antarctica are examining the impacts of anthropogenic global change (e.g. rising CO2, acidity and temperature) on the structure and diversity of phytoplankton communities, and on the ocean nutrient cycling pathways and food webs that they support. Another ongoing project is examining the implications of increasing atmospheric CO2 for nitrogen-fixing organisms in the tropical and subtropical oceans. This new work is at the forefront of increasingly urgent efforts among the international oceanography community to understand the consequences of human fossil fuel emissions for ocean biology and chemistry, and in turn predict the potential feedbacks from these changing ocean processes to atmospheric CO2 and global climate.


PEAK: Deer Valley Trail

DIFFICULTY: 1/5 (1.5 miles)

SCENERY: cacti! Ocean views!

FUN FACT: William Wrigley Jr. acquired the majority of the Catalina Island Company in 1919 and descendants of the Wrigley family are still involved with the company today. Wrigley, whose name you know from Big Red, Juicy Fruit, and Doublemint chewing gums, invested millions of dollars in the island.


TRIP LEAD: Aditi

Is so excited to go back to catalina

Contact Aditi: aajagann@usc.edu (hyperlinked!)

Read Aditi's bio here. (hyperlinked!)


 

Earlier Event: October 22
Cucamonga Peak w/ Jan Amend