Q: How did you come to study biophysics?
A: I always liked understanding how things work. That鈥檚 how I got interested in science to begin with. When I started college, I thought I might study pre-med and maybe become a doctor. I already knew I was interested in biology, and then I took this physics course that I really enjoyed. So, I took another one and then another. Around that time, I realized I didn鈥檛 want to be a doctor and discovered this field, biophysics, where I could research how living things worked. For a lot of a people, when they hear the term biophysics, they think only of cellular biophysics, which studies how things work inside the cell, like the forces involved in DNA replication and how electrical signals pass through nerves, whereas the biophysics I do is all about fluid mechanics and how living things interact with water鈥攖he field is incredibly broad.
Q: Can you tell me about your current research in biological fluid mechanics?
A: Right now, in my lab, we鈥檙e researching a couple of different things. One project we鈥檙e working on is studying microscopic sessile suspension feeders, which are these ubiquitous, single-celled organisms that live attached to surfaces. Every body of water has them: lakes, streams, oceans, mud puddles. I like them because since they live attached to a surface, they don't swim around to get their food. Instead they generate a feeding current to bring their food to them, and what they eat is bacteria and debris. So, they鈥檝e formed this really important link in the food chain and in doing that, they help keep the bodies of water where they live clean. We鈥檙e measuring the rate at which they eat by understanding the feeding current. Through this research, we鈥檙e learning about their ecological impact and someday they could even be used as a natural way to clean up after manmade disasters like oil or sewage spills.
Q: What is the Pepper Lab and what kinds of projects do you and your students do there?
A: Students are involved in all the work in my lab. They鈥檙e investigating plants that use rainwater to disperse seeds through splash cups, and they鈥檙e trying to figure out what makes an optimal splash cup so we can compare it to the real ones. They鈥檙e also trying to understand the orientation of the suspension feeders and how changes in the flow of water affects how they feed. I think research is a great opportunity for science students because it lets you answer a question that no one has the answer to. That鈥檚 the real process of science. You become more independent, you think more critically about the results, and you may experience failure, which is also a part of scientific research. As you鈥檙e doing research, you鈥檙e also growing and developing these skills.
Q: I understand that you鈥檙e on sabbatical. Are you conducting research right now?
A: I just wrapped up a paper while I鈥檝e been on sabbatical, and I鈥檝e been working on a number of projects. One that I鈥檓 really excited about right now is a paper about a microscopic organism called Vorticella. It鈥檚 fascinating because it colonizes debris sinking in marine, freshwater, and wastewater environments. This debris is called 鈥渕arine snow,鈥 and it鈥檚 made up of organic matter, like dead organisms and fecal matter. This debris falling to the ocean floor turns out to have a big ecological footprint, which determines all kinds of other processes, like the rate of carbon sequestration in the ocean. The experimental problem is that Vorticella is tiny鈥攁 hundred microns across or about the width of a human hair鈥攂ut the debris they鈥檙e attached to is sinking fast, so we had to find a way to measure a microscopic object that was moving meters. To do that, I鈥檝e been collaborating with a group at Stanford University who鈥檝e developed the perfect tool. It鈥檚 basically a water treadmill that lets you keep the object in view on your microscope even as it鈥檚 moving many meters. I worked with them two summers ago to take the initial measurements and now I鈥檓 analyzing that data.
Q: Can you tell me about your life beyond campus? What are your other hobbies and interests?
A: I love to be outdoors, running, skiing, biking, and hiking. COVID definitely put a damper on some of those activities, for instance these multiday, town-to-town hikes that I like to do, and they鈥檙e mostly in Europe because the towns are closer together. I first got hooked on them while I was studying physics in England and did a coast-to-coast hike. I have a couple of hikes in Ireland that are on my list for some time in the near future. I also adopted a baby last June and he鈥檚 almost a year old now. That鈥檚 the big new thing in my life.