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Summer Internships: Lili Randolph '23

August 5, 2022
Lili Randolph headshot

Name: Lili Randolph
Class Year: 2023
Major: Environmental Studies
Minor: Biology
Hometown: Fairfield, CT

Internship Organization: Mountain Lake Biological Station
Job Title: Research Intern
Location: Pembroke, Virginia


Whatā€™s happening at your internship? We would love to hear what kind of work you are doing!

This summer, Iā€™m conducting research on the forked fungus beetle (Bolitotherus cornutus) at the Mountain Lake Biological Station in Pembroke, Virginia. Generally, my workday consists of doing fieldwork from 6:30-11:30 AM and working on my experiment from 1:30 PM to as late as 6:00 PM. In the mornings, Iā€™m gallivanting around the woods looking at fungus brackets growing on marked logs and snags containing populations of beetles and recording data. In the afternoons, Iā€™ve been collaborating with a UVA graduate student, Clara Stahlmann Roeder, on her dissertation. She is testing to see if there is a winner/loser effect among male forked fungus beetles, which occurs when a beetleā€™s chance of winning a fight is directly affected by their recent defeat or victory in a previous battle. In other species, it has been demonstrated that recent victors have a higher chance of winning and a loser will have a lower chance of winning after they have just fought. However, this phenomenon has yet to be tested among our study species until now. The experiment that I created in conjunction with Claraā€™s dissertation examines whether or not neutral male beetles can detect whether another individual has won or lost a fight through chemical cues. I based my question off of a previous studentā€™s research where she tested if female beetles were able to distinguish a winner or loser based on the chemicals they produced.

Beetle

Why did you apply for this internship?

I asked to join Swarthmore College Professor Vincent Formicaā€™s lab because I wanted to pursue my interest in animal behavior and I had a great experience in his class, ā€œEvolution of Animal Societiesā€ last fall. During this time, I decided that he would make a great mentor for me to explore animal-based research for the first time.

Was this internship what you expected it to be?

Before arriving at the station, I was studying abroad in the city of Granada, Spain, where everything was within walking distance and the only green space in the area was a medium-sized park. The thought of transitioning from that to living on the top of a mountain where the closest town was a 30-minute drive away wasā€¦ intimidating. Especially because, contrary to my environmentalist vibes, I generally think of heavily wooded areas to be cesspools of creepy crawlies like ticks, spiders, and mosquitoes (ESPECIALLY mosquitoes) - all of which I have an intense aversion to and had imagined Iā€™d be encountering in swarms during fieldwork. Normally I wouldnā€™t have minded but weā€™re not allowed to wear bug spray here because it changes invertebrate behavior (including that of the beetles whose behavior weā€™re testing). The few days leading up to my arrival at Mountain Lake were thus filled with loads of packing, purchasing of Afterbite, and worrying about my future living in isolation as a forest-hating hermit living in a forest. To my surprise and delight however, Iā€™ve experienced a rich social life from interacting with all of the brilliant scientists working here and have found that there really arenā€™t as many mosquitoes as Iā€™d imagined. Being here has given me the opportunity to connect with nature more deeply as Iā€™m learning to appreciate the beautiful landscape around me, all the different species that live here, and the amount of complexity involved in studying them. On top of that, Iā€™ve been filling my free time playing volleyball, roasting marshmallows, hiking, and having game nights with people ranging from undergraduates to well-established researchers with PhDs. The friendly atmosphere here has made me feel at-home while giving me the space to explore the world of ecology that, since now, Iā€™d only skimmed the surface of.

Can you give us three adjectives and three nouns that describe your internship experience?

Social - The community here is small and tight-knit so Iā€™m constantly interacting with people in social settings in addition to collaborating with my teammates during fieldwork and experiments.

Clumsy - I canā€™t tell you how many times I have tripped and fallen, how many beetles Iā€™ve dropped on the ground and lost in the leaf litter, or how many little mishaps Iā€™ve had while conducting my experiments. And I also canā€™t tell you how okay it is to make mistakes because EVERYONE does, and you learn so much from them.

Busy - There are days when I work from 6:30 am to 6:00 pm with only a 1.5-hour break during lunch. This isnā€™t usually the case, but Iā€™ve definitely been busy. I am, however, enjoying what Iā€™m doing and still have plenty of time outside of work to do other things.

Beetles - So. Many. Beetles. 

Walking Stick - After the first couple of weeks here, I found myself the most superb walking stick to help traverse the steep and treacherous terrain of the mountainside during fieldwork. And immediately lost it. I then found a slightly less superb but still great walking stick that Iā€™ve been using every single day since. I love this stick.

Love - I love the work that Iā€™m doing here, love the friends Iā€™ve made here, love that I get to be in nature, and love that Iā€™ve learned so much about myself while living here. This is a truly special place that I feel privileged and honored to be a part of.


Visit the Summer Internship Stories page to read more about student internship experiences.

Environmental Studies Biology