Riley Drake

Riley Drake

Feb 27, 2022

Group 6 Copy 462
0
Please wait...

About This Project

The Tongass National Forest in Alaska contains both damaged and undamaged caves. These caves are homes to a bacteria-rich mineraloid formation called moonmilk. Microbial communities play critical roles in maintaining ecosystem stability. This motivated our team of cavers and cave explorers to travel to remote field sites this summer to collect and analyze samples and attempt to answer the question: Does human-caused damage to cave formations change the moonmilk ecosystem?

Blast off!

Browse Other Projects on Experiment

Related Projects

Empowering coastal youth for enhanced coastal and mangrove monitoring amidst massive sargassum landings.

The Caribe Mexicano MPA, home to 50% of the western hemisphere's largest barrier reef, has faced massive...

What does whales' poop tell us about the deep ocean ?

Over years, I have built a collection of cetacean fecal samples. While the majority of these samples are...

Coral Collective: Advancing Coral Resiliency with AI Software

Coral Collective uses AI-powered monitoring to support coral reef conservation. Our platform analyzes coral...

Backer Badge Funded

An ecology project funded by 21 people