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Shine Ling’s proactive approach created
amazing opportunities. |
Scientific Curiosity is His Compass
To anyone unfamiliar with what Shine Ling calls “real
research,” the notion that laboratory inquiry is “thrilling” might
seem over the top. But Shine, a graduate in biology from UCSB’s
College of Creative Studies (CCS), is serious. “I’m
not talking about experiments that are repeated in laboratory courses
for the zillionth time,” he says. “All that is basic,
yes—however, I’m referring to asking entirely new questions
in the lab. When we find out the answers, we’ve created new
knowledge!”
Shine did exactly that during the three years he spent in marine biologist Alice Alldredge's lab at UCSB’s Marine Science Institute. His research
with Professor Alldredge showed that the transparent particles that phytoplankton
produce carry bacteria and—contrary to what scientists once thought—are
consumed by tiny marine animals. The findings add to a changing picture of the
ocean’s food webs. “It’s hard to describe the feeling of learning
something new,” says Shine. “It’s a real thrill! And that opportunity
is available to all undergraduates.”
So far, Shine’s habit of following his interests has taken him up and down
the coast of California and to Central America. After transferring to UCSB from
De Anza College, a community college in Cupertino, California, at the start of
his sophomore year, he went off to Costa Rica to study tropical ecology during
spring quarter. There, he did an independent research project on the mutually
beneficial relationship between a fig tree—which is important to animals
in the rainforest community—and its tiny pollinating wasp. Upon his return,
he joined the Alldredge lab.

Marine bacteria, fluorescing as bright dots, inhabiting transparent exopolymer
particles. |
Significant Opportunities in Three Countries
The following summer, Shine obtained a position in San Diego examining the ecology
of the cholera-causing bacterium Vibrio cholerae in the ocean. In his
senior year, still curious about the mutualisms he had witnessed in Costa Rica,
he sent an e-mail message to a scientist from the Smithsonian Institution who
was working on figs and wasps in Panama and asked about an internship. The scientist
said yes, and funded half of the trip; a Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship
from the College of Creative Studies covered the rest.
Of his years in the Alldredge lab Shine says: “What I valued most about
doing research with Professor Alldredge was her mentorship. She gave me a lot
of responsibility, and showed me what real science is like—the work involved,
the disappointments, and the surprises. The experience helped me confirm that
I enjoy doing science and designing experiments. It will also help me figure
out what kind of research I would be interested in doing.”
The research Shine completed earned him UCSB’s Chancellor’s Award
for Excellence in Undergraduate Research and accolades from faculty. Says Professor
Alldredge: “Ten years from now I expect Shine to be one of
the broadest thinkers in evolutionary biology.” Adds Armand Kuris, CCS
associate provost and a marine biologist: “He will assume a prominent place
in international science.”
As Shine considers the countless options available to him, he says he will “continue
to follow my curiosity—wherever it takes me.” Stay tuned.
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