News Release

Research with wood ducks earns graduate student 2 national awards

Grant and Award Announcement

Virginia Tech

Sarah DuRant, Virginia Tech

image: Sarah DuRant of Saluda, S.C., a fisheries and wildlife sciences doctoral student in Virginia Tech's College of Natural Resources, received Grants-in-Aid of Research awards from both the scientific research society Sigma Xi and the Society of Integrative and Comparative Biology for her work and research with wood ducks. view more 

Credit: Bill Hopkins, Virginia Tech

Blacksburg, Va. — Sarah DuRant of Saluda, S.C., a fisheries and wildlife sciences doctoral student in Virginia Tech's College of Natural Resources, received Grants-in-Aid of Research (GIAR) awards from both the scientific research society Sigma Xi and the Society of Integrative and Comparative Biology for her work and research with wood ducks.

DuRant received a Sigma Xi GIAR award (http://www.sigmaxi.org/programs/giar/index.shtml) for her research on immunological and energetic tradeoffs in young birds. By encouraging close working relationships with students, the Sigma Xi GIAR program encourages scientific excellence and achievement through hands-on learning.

The Society of Integrative and Comparative Biology selected DuRant to receive a GIAR award (http://www.sicb.org/grants/giarawards2009.php3) in the Comparative Physiology and Biochemistry division for her research titled "Slight changes in incubation temperature affect early growth and stress endocrinology in wood duck (Aix sponsa) ducklings."

"Sarah is using a novel approach to study the intimate relationships between female birds and their developing offspring. Her findings are incredibly exciting and demonstrate that very small changes in a mother's behavior during egg incubation can have profound effects on the health of her babies after they hatch," said Bill Hopkins, fisheries and wildlife sciences associate professor and DuRant's adviser.

Once she completes her doctorate, DuRant says she "plans to get a faculty position at a research university. I would really like to be involved in both research and teaching."

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The College of Natural Resources (http://www.cnr.vt.edu/) at Virginia Tech consistently ranks among the top three programs of its kind in the nation. Faculty members stress both the technical and human elements of natural resources and instill in students a sense of stewardship and land-use ethics. Areas of studies include environmental resource management, fisheries and wildlife sciences, forestry, geospatial and environmental analysis, natural resource recreation, urban forestry, wood science and forest products, geography, and international development. Virginia Tech, the most comprehensive university in Virginia, is dedicated to quality, innovation, and results to the commonwealth, the nation, and the world.

See related stories:

Virginia Tech Research Magazine, "Mothers' influence on young wildlife more than genetic" http://www.research.vt.edu/resmag/2009winter/mothers.html


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