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August 6, 2010

Islesboro students get eye-opening results from deer study

Sandy Oliver:

A recent and startling increase in tick-borne Lyme disease among Islesboro residents gave nine students in Islesboro Central School's ninth grade, and two of their teachers, science teacher Heather Sinclair and business and computer education teacher Vicki Conover, a unique and perfect opportunity to combine classroom and experiential learning. To examine the connection between the island's deer population and the increase of Lyme disease, students in Ms. Sinclair's biology class conducted primary scientific research to determine the island's deer herd size, then with Ms. Conover's guidance used GIS and computer applications to analyze and present the data to propose one possible cause of the disease's increase.

As a Health Center Advisory Board (HCAB) member, Ms. Sinclair heard concerns about the deer herd's possible relationship to the spread of Lyme disease on island. The HCAB decided to conduct a deer count and hired a consulting firm, Stantec, to design a survey. The students and twenty community volunteers did the on-the-ground research, following the procedure recommended by Stantec. To establish a sample, Stantec identified thirty-three random transects, lines across the island, that included representative terrain and habitat. The students and Stantec both analyzed the data that volunteers gathered.

Posted by Jim Zellmer at August 6, 2010 2:32 AM
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