. Coast watch. Marine resources; Oceanography; Coastal zone management; Coastal ecology. University for his doctorate in natural resources management. It was at Syracuse where he met Murray, a master's student who joined him on a research project. "He was really my mentor on that project," Murray says. To begin his career, Voiland responded to a Cornell University posting for a Sea Grant extension specialist on the Great Lakes. He had seen specialists in the field, and thought: "That looks like the 'funnest'; He got the job and was stationed at SUNY Brockport on Lake. L


. Coast watch. Marine resources; Oceanography; Coastal zone management; Coastal ecology. University for his doctorate in natural resources management. It was at Syracuse where he met Murray, a master's student who joined him on a research project. "He was really my mentor on that project," Murray says. To begin his career, Voiland responded to a Cornell University posting for a Sea Grant extension specialist on the Great Lakes. He had seen specialists in the field, and thought: "That looks like the 'funnest'; He got the job and was stationed at SUNY Brockport on Lake. LEFT TO RIGHT: VOILAND EMPHASIZES A PDINT AT THE CdSEE-SE MEETING. • THE CDSEE BOARD ALSO INCLUDES KAREN Dawkins of East Carolina University, far left, and MaryAnn Brittian, far right, of the Museum of Natural Sciences. • Sizemdre explains lab facilities at UNCW. Ontano. "I loved that job," he says. "I was extending university research information — and constantly learning about coastal ; In one case, Voiland worked closely with researchers and stakeholders to determine the movement of salmon and trout — new fisheries to the area because of stocking programs. But what he read in textbooks regarding freshwater lakes did not fit with what he and others saw on this Great Lake. 'To help the shoreline economy, charter boat captains and recreational anglers needed to figure out where those fish would be during different seasons," he says. Combining research and extension, Voiland concluded that Lake Ontario's spnng "thermal bar" and other temperature- related water features were keys to tracking the whereabouts of salmonids. "The thermal bar sets up, and then moves offshore," he explains. Thus anglers could look for temperature changes as clues to find fish. "Now with coastal observations, you can go to a Web site and apply that information," he says, adding that he is eager to see how offshore anglers in


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookcollectionunclibra, booksubjectoceanography