Up Close with Urchins: Undergrads Collect Lab Specimens on the Gemma

Undergraduates in the Semester in Biological Discovery gather with 麻花星空视频 researchers aboard the Gemma. Assistant Scientist Zak Swartz is in the center and Scott Bennett of the Marine Resources Center is on the right. Credit: Molly Herring

This Earth Day, students at the Marine Biological Laboratory ( 麻花星空视频) took to the sea. 

Undergraduates from the 麻花星空视频鈥檚 Semester in Biological Discovery (SBD) hopped aboard the 麻花星空视频 collecting vessel R/V Gemma on Tuesday morning to collect specimens for the SBD Embryology course. They were joined by course director and 麻花星空视频 Assistant Scientist Zak Swartz, whose lab at the 麻花星空视频 studies reproductive biology and development in sea stars. Sea urchins are also among Swartz's areas of expertise, and it was these that the crew hoped to collect for the Embryology course. 

鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to get more involved with the locally available biodiversity,鈥 Swartz said, standing on the deck of Gemma. The goal was for the students to spawn the urchins in the lab, collect their sperm and eggs, and generate embryos, he explained. 

Captain David Bank took Gemma through the misty waters around Woods Hole and around Nobska Point. Bank and Scott Bennett of the Marine Resources Center used Gemma鈥檚 dredge to collect a bounty of organisms, including sea urchins, sea stars, horseshoe crabs, and comb jellies. 

Swartz and the students ended up taking roughly 50 urchins back to the 麻花星空视频, but found it was too early in the season for them to be reproductive. The students instead generated embryos from a different species of urchin that was already in the lab.  

鈥淭he purpose of working with these animals in the lab was so that students could learn about fertilization: how sperm and egg find each other, especially in the open ocean; how sperm and egg recognize each other through molecular interactions, how the egg and sperm fuse, how the [fertilized] egg then prevents extra sperm from entering (very bad for development!), and then how the sperm and egg genomes combine,鈥 Swartz wrote in an email the following day. 

As the eggs develop, the students are comparing the differences between sea urchin and sea star development, he added. 

Student smiles down at sea urchin held in his hand
Alexander Harris of Dartmouth College smiles down at a sea urchin aboard the Gemma. Credit: Molly Herring
Student looks through bottle with comb jellies
Sophia Liu of Smith College looks through a bottle of comb jellies aboard the Gemma. Credit: Molly Herring

Multiple students said Tuesday was their first time on a collecting vessel. Ammar Raslan, set to graduate from Kenyon College in December, said he was grateful for the chance to see what it鈥檚 like aboard a marine boat. 

Yuki Yang, a sophomore at Smith College, said field work is not her preference, but called it 鈥渞eally impressive.鈥 

鈥淚t鈥檚 cool being able to engage with these activities, just to know how they retrieve the specimens,鈥 she said. 

Sophia Liu of Smith College highlighted that scientists can learn from marine organisms. 

鈥淪ome really wacky things are going on in the ocean,鈥 she said.