So there were three graduates this month, and I had something to do with each one.
First was Miguel Manrique, who looked at two important families of insects, Reduvidae and Pentatomidae. Reduvids are called assassin bugs because they are insane predators, like the Terminator, totally destroying other insects, often pests in our fields. Pentatomids include stink bugs, and can be garden pests. He discovered that there is less diversity in these families than other families, and that there is a gradient of species as one moves from the forest to the forest edge to the field. I was Miguel's research project adviser, and he is now the head of our insect diversity project, which supervises the collection of insects all around the College.
Then came Jorge Apala. Jorge and I started the goat project in Coroico Viejo in 2002. We traveled all over Bolivia in search of goats to populate the project, at one point driving from Santa Cruz to Cochabamba to La Paz with a Land Cruiser full of goats -- 18 goats at once! (It was a smelly ride.) Of the goats we bought and brought to our experiment station in Coroico Viejo, Jorge discovered that the variation between milk production depended more on the individual goat than its purported race. I personally had a special love for the Anglonubians. They were the friendliest...
Last was Edwin Zapata. He researched wasps that live in our forest and fields. His research demonstrated that many wasps are able to survive in different habitats, most of them looking for other insects to scoop up and eat. I was the project adviser for Edwin, too.
It is always hugely gratifying to see these young people take their oath as a new agronomist or veterinarian, and hear their words of thanks to their professors and other mentors. None of them forget to thank Sister Damon for how she touched each of them personally. And now it is their turn to move others.
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