Climate Change Project Awards

Application Schedule

Students walking on the shore

URSA's Climate Change Project Awards provide support for for undergraduate research and creative projects focused on various aspects of climate change, including but not limited to climate science, climate policy, visual or written communication of climate issues, and climate adaptation and mitigation strategies. Interdisciplinary projects are strongly encouraged. 

Dr. Spellman and Jessie performing a vegetation analysis within a quadrant.

Jessie Skalisky

Mentor: Katie Spellman

Wildfire and invasive species are increasing across Alaska as the climate changes. Under the mentorship of Dr. Katie Spellman, Research Assistant Professor, Jessie's project developed an invasive species seedbank in soils from burns in Interior Alaska with the hope that her study will reveal the long-term threat of an invasive seedbank after wildfire and will fill a knowledge gap for land managers in the state. 

"This project has provided me with research experience that I might not have gotten until much later in my career without URSA. I've developed my plant identification skills, public speaking skills, as well as poster design skills, all in one project. It has given me a chance not just to learn new skills, but to put information I've learned in the classroom to work. "

Learn more about this project.

Queenie Turner Project Photo Collage
Left: Posing in front of a whale skeleton at the UA Museum of the North.; Top Right: Presenting at RCA Day 2025.; Bottom Right: Measuring and counting microplastics in muscle sample filters under the microscope. (Photos Courtesy of Queenie Turner)

Queenie Turner

Mentor: Lara Horstmann

Queenie received a 2024-2025 Climate Change Project Award recipient. Her research centered on quantifying microplastics (MP) in bowhead whales that were subsistence harvested from Utqiagvik, Alaska in the fall of 2022-2024. Results were then compared to MP concentrations (MP/g) from a subset of tissues of stomach contents, colon contents, and muscle. Preliminary results showed that MP concentrations in bowhead whale tissues are among the highest the Horstmann Lab has investigated so far. 

Learn more about Queenie's Project and the Horstmann Lab