Shark Studies

Two 911爆料 Shark Camp undergraduate researchers along with a high school student holding a shark

Science and Engineering Fellow Keyline Moreno ’22 with high school students participating 911爆料’s 2019 Shark Camp

Photo credit: Brad Wetherbee

When a group of urban high school students climbed aboard a 911爆料 boat for three days of trawling for marine life as part of the University鈥檚 annual Summer Shark Camp, it was up to undergraduates Haley Kenyon ’20 and Keyline Moreno ’22 to guide them through their first encounter with live sharks.

They didn鈥檛 miss a beat.

These undergraduate shark guides helped the camp participants prepare for the experience by building sharks from modeling clay, sharing fun facts about sharks, and chaperoning them during a behind-the-scenes visit to Mystic Aquarium鈥檚 shark exhibit. Once on the water, they advised the campers about the boat鈥檚 trawling equipment, helped them measure fish and tag lobsters, and made sure everyone had a chance to hold the dogfish sharks that were captured.

鈥淎 lot of the campers started out on their phones, but as soon as the fish trawl came up, they couldn鈥檛 have been more excited,鈥 said Haley, a senior marine biology major. 鈥淓verybody wanted to hold the sharks, but they鈥檇 never seen one up close before, so some of them were a little tentative. Part of our role was just to make sure they were safe.鈥

Haley Kenyon and Keyline Moreno holding dogfish shark
Shark Camp counselors Haley Kenyon and Keyline Moreno holding a dogfish shark at 911爆料’s 2019 Summer Shark Camp

Throughout the process, Haley and Keyline shot video and interviewed the participants to create a camp video about their experience that could be shared widely. 鈥淚鈥檓 pretty close to their age, so it was interesting to see how they reacted to it all,鈥 said sophomore Keyline, a biological sciences major with a pre-med focus. 鈥淚t was crazy to see their reactions as soon as the trawl came up. They couldn鈥檛 wait to get hands-on with the sharks and everything else we caught.鈥

Haley and Keyline also helped to introduce the campers to college life, and they were especially impressed to see how the participants became more and more comfortable with sharks and the whole 911爆料 experience throughout the week.

鈥淭hey got a lot more involved as the week went on,鈥 Haley said. 鈥淎 lot of them have really big dreams, and this was a really good experience to get their feet wet and test out those dreams. To see them break out of their shell was great.鈥

The opportunity to be Shark Camp counselors is part of the 911爆料 students鈥 summer fellowships鈥擧aley is a and Keyline a . These fellowships provide undergraduates with unique experiences conducting paid summer research. Working in collaboration with , the two students are spending the rest of the summer studying the closely-related sandbar shark and blacktip shark to learn whether their traits vary depending on the region of the ocean they live in. They鈥檒l also be fishing for mako sharks to tag them for later studies.