Biology undergraduates return from tenth year of African field biology course
Third-year Biological Sciences students get hands on with the flora and fauna of South Africa.
There is always a sense of excitement when embarking on a trip abroad, but to experience South Africa alongside your peers who share your curiosity and fascination in the natural world was a fantastic opportunity granted to Imperial’s South African Field Biology course students.
As the Autumn term began and the Imperial College London campuses revived with student activity, 23 third-year Biological Sciences students and three academic staff travelled to the Cape Floristic Region of South Africa.
Overlooking the Brandvlei dam, the students settled in at the Klipbokkop Mountain Reserve, a picturesque family-run establishment nestled in the sandstone cliffs of the Cape Fold Mountains. Out in the field and surrounded by the unique sclerophyllous vegetation characteristic to the Western Cape’s fynbos (a small belt of natural shrubland or heathland vegetation), the students could not have found themselves a better setting for a field biology course.
In the two weeks on location, not a moment was wasted. The students were thrown into an action-packed field biology bootcamp: one day spent mist-netting and ringing birds with local ornithologist Dieter Oschadleus and Imperial senior lecturer Dr Julia Schroeder, another day spent implementing four separate invertebrate sampling techniques simultaneously with Imperial’s Dr Richard Gill, and finally a day spent sampling the astonishing plant diversity with local Fynbos extraordinaire Dr Anso le Roux and Imperial Professor Vincent Savolainen, who organises this course each year.
These first few days not only shaped the students’ future research project ideas, but also revealed much about the group’s composition of passions. What was particularly wonderful about this was how some students’ lifelong interests could draw in other students and inspire them. Cristian, the brilliant birder with his binoculars and field guide always in hand; Miguel, the resident invertebrate aficionado leaving no stone unturned; Veronika’s admiration for plants always shining through; Tom’s philosophical contemplations on conservation and nature itself; and Celina’s inexhaustible delight at the sight of any organism she had the opportunity to learn from.
After an intense day of coursework submission following our rapid field training, the group was rewarded with an eventful weekend trip starting with a safari at a private game reserve. After marvelling at the statuesque kudu, regal lions and endangered white rhinoceros, the group was whisked off to yet another one of the Cape’s unique ecoregions, the Knysna Montane Forest.
There, they were introduced to a South African large mammal relocation expert and black rhinoceros conservationist who accompanied them on an in situ lecture through the forest as well as providing an account of his first-hand experience working in wildlife management in South Africa. On their way back to Klipbokkop, they even stopped at the seaside town of Hermanus, where the students huddled together like penguins on beachside boulders, with their binoculars pointed avidly toward the horizon, roaring with delight at the sight of breaching southern right whales.
Upon their return to Klipbokkop, the students embarked on their ambitious and creative mini-projects. Some mirrored a previous publication of our professor’s, looking at phylogenetic distances of invasive plant species in the fynbos; some investigated macro-invertebrate scavenging rates in recently burnt and historically burnt vegetation; some explored the miraculous and mysterious nature of weaver bird nests, and many more.
Students have returned to London exhausted, intrigued, inspired, excited, and most importantly, with a deeper admiration for the living world. Experiencing field work, working alongside those who have dedicated their academic careers to research in the field, and sharing the excitement of having learnt all this with peers has all provoked and reinforced the passion needed to motivate biology undergraduates to pursue further aspirations in ecology and conservation.
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Words by Celina Chen and Miguel Bailey Santiago Perez.
Unless otherwise stated, photos provided are taken by Imperial biology student and conservation photojournalist Celina Chien. For more work or further distribution please visit celinachien.com
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