For Alicia Rich her childhood dream of being a primatologist when she grew up. came to fruition at the Robert E. Cook Honors College (http://www.iup.edu/honors), and this summer she is going all the way to Kenya for the research experience of a lifetime.
Alicia was offered a position as the research assistant for Dr. Marina Cords, a professor in the department of Ecology, Evolution, and Environmental Biology at Columbia University
(http://www.ce.columbia.edu/postbacstudies/programchange.cfmProg=E3B&PID=35). She will
spend her summer trekking through Kenya's Kakamega forest studying female cooperation in blue monkeys, a species known for forming territorial coalitions. Her research will focus on how
females create these alliances during grooming and other relaxed social behaviors.
Alicia already has a good idea of what her research and daily life in Africa will be like. "I'll be following four or five troops around for about ten hours a day collecting data on
certain individuals and encounters," she explains. "The evenings are spent entering data and meeting with the other field researchers to discuss each day's findings. Then on my off-days
I'll have the occasional chance to ride into the town of Kakamega for supplies and such. I'll be living there until December 1st, so about six months."
Moving to Africa is a thrilling prospect for Alicia, who has had a passion for primates, especially gorillas, since the day her second grade teacher introduced the class to a book about
primatology. "I was amazed and instantly hooked," Alicia remembers. "My parents still chuckle about their reactions when I came home from school and said, 'I
decided today that I'm going to be a primatologist when I grow up.' My dad says that his first reaction was to look up the word primatologist, while my mother wrote it off as a phase that
would probably pass. It never did."
Many were skeptical about Alicia's prospects when she came to IUP with her childhood dream of becoming a primatologist still intact. Undaunted, she refused to give up her passion and
found refuge in the atmosphere of the Robert E Cook Honors College. "While I've encountered my fair share of critics and pessimists who thought I'd never be able to make it to this point,
or that my field just wasn't worth it, the number of supporters I've found within the Robert E Cook Honors College and beyond these past few years have far outnumbered and overshadowed
them," Alicia says.
She continued pursuing primatology and was able to get an internship as a gorilla researcher at the Pittsburgh Zoo (http://www.pittsburghzoo.org/). "When I began interning any doubts I had that primatology was right for me were instantly destroyed. I love that their
communication and most of their behavior is so subtle. I feel like I discover something new about the dynamics of the troop every day. The complexity and frequency of social behavior in
primates is rivaled by few other animal orders. Because I've fallen in love with evolutionary theory and the origins of human behavior, studies of primates, both in captivity and in the
wild, are incredibly useful," Alicia says. Her experience as an intern had both personal and professional benefits; her supervisor at the zoo, Dr. Peter Fashing, helped her find her
position in Kenya.
Though the prospect of moving to Africa to study monkeys for six months might deter many students from a life in primatology, Alicia's experiences as an undergraduate have more than
prepared her for the challenge of Kenyan life. Alicia participated in a course called Primate Behavior and Ecology at the La Suerte Biological Field Station in Costa Rica. She and a group
of other students spent a month taking an intense class coupled with hours of field study. Alicia has fond memories of the experience, including waking up before 4:00 a.m. and checking
for snakes on the way back to the students' cabins. Not everything about the trip was easy, though.
"The final ten days of the course involved independent research projects," Alicia explains. "That meant long days in the field. I love a challenge, so I chose the white faced capuchin for
my project. They are tiny, fast, and quiet. This makes them nearly impossible to find in the lush Costa Rican rain forest. I think that was the first time I ever considered giving up on
my goal. It was only for a brief moment though, and I simply got back up and kept trekking. Somehow I pulled together a project that I was proud of, and it made me realize I was still
right for field research."
"The money the Robert E Cook Honors College (http://www.iup.edu) has given me means so much more to me and to my family than the people that donated it
will ever understand," she says. "This is something I could never afford to do on my own, but I was determined to make happen somehow. The enhancement fund provided me that final link to
my goal that was so important in creating my future."