One Health Experiential Learning Program

One Health Experiential Learning Program

About the Program

This One Health summer field training internship brings together undergraduate students and mentors from diverse disciplines and perspectives for experiential learning linking human, animal, plant, and ecosystem health. Students conduct field research, connect with experts from diverse disciplines, and participate in discussion groups to explore research methods, scientific literature, and community engagement. Working in collaborative teams, students examine diverse species in an agricultural ecosystem recently impacted by high pesticide contamination originating from the AltEn ethanol facility, which processed surplus outdated and pesticide-treated seeds to produce ethanol. The leaching of pesticide-contaminated byproducts at this scale presents unique opportunities to examine the environmental fate, persistence, and transport of systemic pesticides, like neonicotinoid insecticides, and the long-term impacts on people, animals, and our shared environments.

To learn more about AltEn and the on-going collaborative monitoring response to pesticide contamination, please visit the University of Nebraska Medical Center's website.

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Field Photos

Current Research

Songbirds

Songbirds are sensitive to the impacts of neonicotinoids and other pesticides, with neonicotinoid pesticides linked to bird population declines in the US and Europe. Our team is monitoring pesticide levels in the eggs of red-winged blackbirds, a songbird that lives in agricultural landscapes throughout the study area. We're also monitoring the survival of red-winged blackbird eggs and chicks, which will contribute to our understanding of pesticide impacts on songbird reproduction.

Frogs

Frogs are excellent sentinels of pesticides or other chemicals running off the landscape into streams, rivers, reservoirs, and other aquatic environments. Our team is investigating pesticide exposure in native Nebraska frogs as well as invasive bullfrogs in sites close to and farther downstream from the AltEn plant. Using dip nets to catch tadpoles, we can assess what native frog species are living and breeding in contaminated environments and collect tissues from animals to understand levels of pesticide exposure and potential broader risks for other wildlife species, domestic animals and humans.

Honeybees

Honey bees and other wild bees provide critical food web support to other wildlife as well as vital pollination services to a wide array of plants within agricultural, urban, and natural landscapes. Bees fly several miles away from their homes in search for floral nectar or pollen and may encounter pesticides through the air or when foraging on contaminated flowers. Foraging bees may die away from their hive or bring pesticide residues back home which may impair social behaviors, disrupt colony functions, and reduce overwintering survival. Our team is investigating how bees near AltEn are becoming exposed to pesticides, at what levels, and where. This information will allow us to identify “hotspots” where systemic pesticide pollution is most prominent as well as to monitor the long-term impacts on both managed and wild pollinator communities.

Soil Nematodes

Coming soon!

Milkweed Visitors

Milkweeds are plants found throughout the U.S. and are best known as the only food source for monarch butterfly caterpillars. However, milkweeds are also crucial to the survival of a variety of other animals, including native pollinators, and other beneficial insects, which like monarch caterpillars, are very sensitive to insecticides in the environment. To better understand the impacts of these contaminants, we are monitoring milkweed plants in the landscape near AltEn to determine differences in milkweed insect diversity and abundance.