The Coastal Dolphins of Orange County (CDOC) Project is accepting applications 
for its 2013 summer and fall field courses. The field course is based out of 
Newport Beach, CA and will involve a commitment of approximately 20 hours per 
week extending over a 12-week period from June 3 - August 23, 2013 (summer 
course) and September 2 - November 22, 2013 (fall course). There is some 
flexibility in these start and end dates. The program offers an excellent 
opportunity for qualified and motivated individuals to obtain field and 
laboratory training in behavioral, acoustic, and photo-id methodology and 
analyses under the mentorship of experienced dolphin researchers.

 

Program participants will receive training in three broad areas of dolphin 
research:  1) fieldwork, 2) laboratory work, and 3) literature 
research/seminar.  Fieldwork includes photo-identification, behavioral 
sampling, and acoustic sampling (including passive acoustic monitoring of 
marine mammals). Fieldwork will involve both shore- and boat-based data 
collection and observation, although most participants spend about 75% of their 
time collecting data from shore and 25% from the boat. Laboratory work will 
provide participants training in how to build and maintain a digital 
photo-identification catalog using ACDSee and fin-identification software, 
analysis of digitized acoustic data using signal processing software (e.g., 
Canary), and entry and analysis of behavioral data using SPSS, Excel, and R 
software. Weekly seminars will provide participants the opportunity to discuss 
relevant scientific research articles, receive instruction on methodology and 
theory related to dolphin research, and present research on their own topic of 
interest relevant to the project. In addition, local experts lead guest 
seminars on a variety of topics, including marine mammal veterinary medicine, 
stranding and rehabilitation, acoustic analysis, and communication in cetaceans.

 

Program activities are closely tied to the working schedule of the CDOC 
Project, which operates on a seven day-a-week basis. Program participants will 
work under the immediate supervision of Dr. Kayla Causey, Director of the CDOC 
Project. During a typical week, students can expect to spend about three days 
(~3 hours per day) collecting data in the field, one evening (about 3-hours) in 
seminar, and a combination of two afternoons or mornings (~8 hours total) 
working in the lab. In addition, students should allot time to complete 
assigned readings and prepare for the week’s seminar discussion.

 

The field course is structured around the goals of the CDOC Project, which 
include understanding the behavior, distribution, and social ecology of Pacific 
Coast Common Bottlenose Dolphins, Tursiops truncatus. For more information 
about the project, please visit www.kaylacausey.com/CDOC_Project.

 

The fee for the three-month field course is $1000, payable to Cal State 
Fullerton Philanthropic Foundation. Fees are tax-deductible. Course 
participants will be responsible for their own living expenses and 
transportation to and from the field site in Newport Beach and California State 
University Fullerton. The course may be repeated three times in succession 
(i.e., one year).

 

The CDOC Project Field Course is intended to provide a mentored training 
opportunity for a small and select group of applicants.  Ideal candidates will 
be advanced undergraduates or recent graduates of a scientifically-oriented 
university program in marine science, biology, comparative psychology, or a 
related field.  Preference will be given to applicants with well-developed 
computer skills and boating experience. It is expected that most applicants 
will pursue the CDOC Project Field Course as part of their general academic 
preparation for graduate work in cetacean science or animal behavior.  Unlike 
many other marine mammal internships, we have designed our course to serve as a 
scholarly endeavor. Our goal in structuring the program is to provide an 
experience for advanced students that will compliment their undergraduate 
course work and provide them with the "hands on" experience that many graduate 
advisors look for in potential graduate students.

 

To apply, please send a letter of interest including a brief biographical 
sketch, a fairly detailed description of the applicant’s academic history and 
any considerations such as special skills, experiences, and interests that 
would assist in the selection process. The letter should also indicate the 
applicant’s preferred semester (Summer or Fall) and any time constraints 
associated with participation. Interested applicants should email materials to 
Kayla Causey at kcau...@fullerton.edu. Please also have two letters of 
recommendation sent from professors or research supervisors who are familiar 
with the applicant’s scholarship, research skills, and work habits relevant to 
the internship. We anticipate filling the summer course by April 30, 2013. 
Applications for the fall course should be submitted no later than July 1, 2013.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Kayla Causey, PhD
Director, Coastal Dolphins of Orange County (CDOC) Project
Lecturer, Department of Psychology, CSU Fullerton
Board member, Gray Whale Foundation
657.278.5042
www.KaylaCausey.com
alternate email: kcau...@fullerton.edu
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~




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