Diving into Success

Buoyed by their experiences, participants in the USC Scientific Diving program aim to advance their respective fields while making a global impact.
ByRichard Hoops

Michele Felberg ’13 knows the connection between tourism and the marine environment — that’s where she’s worked for the past two years. With the help of a prestigious scholarship, she wants to study how the dive industry that provides her livelihood connects its business plans to marine conservation.

A graduate of the USC Dornsife Environmental Studies program and the USC Scientific Diving program, Felberg was named to a one-year Rolex Scholarship at an April 18 ceremony in New York City through the Our World-Underwater Scholarship Society.  

David Ginsburg, assistant professor (teaching) of environmental studies and assistant USC dive safety officer, extolled the significance of the honor. “This is a very prestigious award — it’s the Fulbright scholarship of the diving community — and Michele is the representative for North America,” he said.

Ginsburg is an instructor for the Scientific Research Diving program, the course that introduced Felberg to the discipline she now represents.

Felberg credits the scientific diving program and subsequent research trips to the western Pacific nations of Micronesia, Guam and Palau — arranged through the environmental studies program — as key factors in her recent honor. Her time in the program led to her certification as a SCUBA diver and as a diver with the American Academy of Underwater Sciences, and she has worked in Palau as a dive guide and underwater naturalist since graduating.

“USC allowed me to continue practicing my diving and research skills throughout my tenure at the university,” Felberg said. “Upon graduation, I was able to secure my job in Palau because of my research diving experience plus my network of divers there.”

The work has given her valuable insight into the industry’s effect on the ocean’s ecosystems. Felberg hopes to expand her network of diving colleagues worldwide through her Rolex Scholarship and “explore the ways the dive tourism industry is combining business with public outreach and education pertinent to marine conservation. I also want to explore the biology and ecology of various marine environments that may need to be protected, and I plan on doing this in as many places and cultures as possible.”

She believes diverse perspectives on the issue are key to ensuring the future of ocean habitats. “There is no one perfect solution but rather endless possibilities for successful marine conservation.”

A growing legacy of success

Felberg is the third diver associated with USC to obtain a Rolex Scholarship. Robin MacFadden Parish received the honor in 1976 and Sterling James Brisbin ‘07 received it in 2008.

While an undergraduate student at Occidental College, Parish spent two semesters at the USC Wrigley Marine Science Center, the centerpiece of the USC Wrigley Institute for Environmental Studies. She worked with the USC Catalina Hyperbaric Chamber, took classes, conducted independent research and aided graduate students as a research assistant. Only the third recipient of the Rolex Scholarship, Felberg is the first woman to receive it, and she has been active for many years as the national coordinator for the Rolex Scholarship program.

Brisbin spent a semester at the USC Wrigley Marine Science Center as a participant in the USC Catalina Semester program and, like Parish, was an active member of the hyperbaric chamber crew. He went on study at the School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences at Stony Brook University and today is a U.S. Air Force pararescue specialist.

Ginsburg noted that the program continues to produce outstanding scholars. “This year, six of our former diving students are graduating from USC, and they’ve already been accepted to graduate programs.”

Richelle Tanner, who graduated this year with a double major in environmental studies at USC Dornsife and jazz studies at USC Thornton School of Music, went through the scientific diving program during her sophomore year. She met Ginsburg in an environmental studies course on Catalina Island during her freshman year.

“He’s the one who suggested that I try scientific diving,” she said, “and I can’t thank him enough.”

In the fall, Tanner will enter a Ph.D. program in integrative biology at the University of California, Berkeley with support from a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship.

Ginsberg points to Tanner and her classmates as evidence of the program’s increasing impact.

“We’re starting to see the demonstrated success of our scientific diving program,” Ginsburg said. “The skills our students learn are broadly applicable and give them a critical boost in advancing their professional and academic careers while helping to ensure they make a positive difference in the world.”

 

Diver Earns Fulbright Scholarship
In addition to USC students who have received Rolex scholarships — the “Fulbright scholarship of the diving community”— one former student diver from USC has been named to an actual Fulbright program through the U.S. Department of State.

Christine Sur ‘12 is finishing an M.S. in the Department of Evolution and Ecology at the University of California, Davis and then will travel to Indonesia as a Fulbright researcher.

Sur started diving in the USC Dornsife program in 2010 and will continue to use her training during her Fulbright fellowship.

“I started diving with the [environmental studies] scientific program,” she said. “I had always wanted to get my dive certification, and this was the perfect opportunity to get involved — from basic open water all the way up to scientific diving.””The scientific diving program helped solidify my interest in marine science,” she added. “It also connected me to many research opportunities that I would not have had otherwise. I’ve been able to gain field experience in Guam and Palau, Catalina Island and Indonesia.”

Sur will be diving regularly as part of her fieldwork in Indonesia for research on food security and sustainability in the Spermonde Islands off the coast of Sulawesi. Specifically, she will be studying how restoration of coastal seagrass and coral habitats affect fish populations and the implications for small island sustainability and food security.