Feyne Elmore

Feyne Elmore
Feyne Elmore

Feyne Elmore needed some acid to clean her summer 2021 research projectā€™s equipment. To get it, she had to give up a little blood.

Elmore, an undergraduate in ocean science, is investigating the sources of mercury in ĄÖ»¢Ö±²„ā€™s Kachemak Bay. She needed pristine equipment.

Elmore knows a UAF researcher who not only had hydrochloric acid on hand but also needed some blood to test for trace metals. A trade was proposed and Elmoreā€™s finger was pricked.

ā€œIā€™m paying for my acid in blood,ā€ Elmore quipped.

Elmore, who grew up in Anchorage and Texas, wants to better understand a curious thing about Kachemak Bayā€™s water. Mercury in the water seems to come more from forested watersheds than glacial watersheds. As glaciers recede and forests take over, the mercury could increase.

Her work, funded by UAFā€™s Undergraduate Research and Scholarly Activity office, could help indicate whether toxic mercury might accumulate in the bayā€™s shellfish.

In March 2021, Elmore received a Barry Goldwater Scholarship. The prestigious award, which covers tuition and other expenses, went to just 410 people nationwide this year.

Meanwhile, Elmoreā€™s day job on campus was caring for 275 lampreys held for research in large tanks. Wild lampreys migrate up ĄÖ»¢Ö±²„ā€™s rivers each fall ā€” with an unusual approach. They don't eat. So she didnā€™t have to feed them.

ā€œI just go in and make sure they arenā€™t dying,ā€ she joked.

Elmore spent her childhood summers in Anchorage, where a major thoroughfare was named for her grandfather, Will Elmore. She would take annual trips to Seward to visit the ĄÖ»¢Ö±²„ Sea Life Center, adjacent to the UAF College of Fisheries and Ocean Scienceā€™s Seward Marine Center.

When the collegeā€™s state-of-the-art research vessel Sikuliaq arrived in 2015, she was in high school.
ā€œI saw the Sikuliaq in Seward and I was like, ā€˜I want to do that. Iā€™m coming to UAF,ā€™ā€ she said.