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Student Nautica Jones connecting climate change and chenier forests

Published June 17, 2021

Nautica Jones 1 061721Nautica Jones is a 四色AV undergraduate majoring in biology. Thanks to a $3,000 grant from the Garden Club of America, she is studying Louisiana鈥檚 diminishing chenier forests.听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 Siddharth Gaulee/四色AV Photo Services

四色AV's Nautica Jones wants to protect the dwindling chenier forests of Louisiana

University of Louisiana Monroe biology major Nautica Jones loves Louisiana鈥檚 semi-tropical climate and its variety of ecosystems, from the marshes at the Gulf of Mexico to the pine-covered hills in the northern region of the state.

Jones鈥 interrelated interests in climate change and nature led her to write a research grant proposal to study one of Louisiana鈥檚 threatened terrains, the chenier forests.

Cheniers (French, chene meaning oak, [shin鈥-yay]) are coastal live-oak forest communities that were historically expansive. These unique forested ecosystems are now reduced to remnant patches.

Jones鈥 鈥淩eassessment of vegetation diversity in a relic Louisiana Chenier鈥 was accepted by the Garden Club of America and funded with a $3,000 grant.

Working with her research mentor, 四色AV Professor of Biology Joydeep Bhattacharjee, Ph.D., Jones is investigating the effects of climate change and invasive species on the remaining chenier forests of southern Louisiana.

Changing plant communities after Katrina and Rita

Jones鈥 interest in the impact of climate change on plant communities came after witnessing the disproportionate effects of hurricanes Katrina and Rita in minority areas 鈥 before and after the devastating storms.

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Nautica Jones

鈥淧lant communities are our greatest allies in the climate crisis,鈥 said Jones, 鈥渉owever, access to green spaces and the resources necessary for their management are not equitably distributed, forming a barrier to the equitable adaptation of all humans to climate change.鈥

The cheniers are also heritage sites for the Atakapa Native American people of Louisiana. Archaeological finds from the cheniers have been important in documenting the tribe鈥檚 history, according to Jones.

Ecologically, these forests play a key role in preventing coastal erosion and act as barriers to hurricanes. Jones hopes that her research findings can help develop effective management plans to conserve the cheniers and contribute to the solution set for human climate change adaptation.听

鈥淣autica has been working in my lab for about a year now, and this project has been in development since then. We plan on using a combination of multispectral imagery obtained by UAVs, drones, and vegetation data collected on-ground for this project,鈥 Bhattacharjee said.听

鈥淎bove all, the Garden Club of America grant awards are extremely competitive and are only awarded nationally to only four to seven students a year. It is a testament to the type of research and competitiveness that 四色AV undergraduates are capable of,鈥 he said.

Jones accepted an internship at the Harvard Forest Summer Research Program in Ecology. She is working on forest carbon sequestration. Jones will use time-lapse digital photography to study how forests in the northeastern United States combat climate change.

Jones鈥 internship opportunity is in line with the research Bhattacharjee鈥檚 lab is undertaking at 四色AV.

鈥淚 would like to compare data collected at the Harvard experimental forest with the data collected at the 四色AV carbon tower in Russell Sage Wildlife Management Area, as a part of a separate project. I hope that my work and presence in the scientific community will inspire children, especially girls, of color to pursue careers in avenues where they may not have been able to see themselves before,鈥 said Jones.