RFRC Award Recipients

The conferring of the Rasmuson Fisheries Fellowship awards represents one of the distinctions offered by the College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences and the University of Alaska Fairbanks. The Fellowship is not just a source of funds for a graduate assistantship, but an award for scholastic achievement in selected areas of fisheries research. The Fellows are selected by the Advisory Board based on their academic record and their potential to contribute to the frontiers of knowledge related to Alaska's marine environs and living resources, especially the valuable commercial fisheries of the region.

Retrospectives of Rasmuson Fishery Fellows describes the many research projects that have been supported since 1994.

2025–2026 Award Recipients

Alorah Bliese

Photo of Alorah Bliese

PhD Marine Biology (Advisor: Amanda Kelley)

Ontogenetic Diet Assessment of Alaskan Grown Pacific Oysters Using an Integrative Approach.

Alorah received their BS Honors in Cell and Molecular Biology from CUNY: John Jay College in 2017 with a minor in English and their MS in Marine Biology and Coastal Sciences from Montclair State University in 2020. As an undergraduate, they studied the epigenetic regulation of chronic diseases, but decided invertebrates were cooler than people. As a Master's student, Alorah pursued research at the intersection of their interests in molecular and marine biology, studying jellyfish venom using a transcriptomic approach. After graduating, she served a partial term in AmeriCorps as a New Jersey Watershed Ambassador, during which she conducted stream habitat and macroinvertebrate surveys across the state, hosted educational workshops, and participated in environmental stewardship events. Following that, Alorah moved across the country to San Diego, CA where she worked as a government contracted research scientist for three years. During this time, they specialized in interdisciplinary sequencing applications and library preparation optimization of environmental samples for sequencing on Illumina and Oxford Nanopore platforms. 
 
Alorah joined CFOS in 2024 as a PhD student in the Marine Biology program. Their dissertation work broadly seeks to explore biological and anthropogenic interactions between mariculture species and the Gulf of Alaska (GOA) ecosystem. Their Rasmuson project builds on the foundational work of Rasmuson Fellow Josianne Haag, and aims to further characterize the diet of Pacific oysters to support the expanding mariculture industry in the state. Alaskan grown oysters occupy a unique dietary niche throughout the Northern GOA, with zooplankton being an important food source. However, little is known about the taxonomic composition of oyster diet or how diet composition changes as oysters grow. This dietary information is key to understanding resource partitioning changes that can influence successful development and growth in cold GOA waters and can be used to guide farm site selection. Alorah's study utilizes bulk stable isotope, microscopic, and eDNA metabarcoding techniques to characterize the diet of Alaskan grown Pacific oysters throughout their development. 

Photo of Chelsea CampbellChelsea Campbell (Kovalcsik)

MS Marine Biology (Advisor: Lara Horstmann)

Environmental and anthropogenic drivers in the decline of the northern fur seal (Callorhinus ursinus) on St. Paul Island, Alaska.

Chelsea Campbell (Kovalcsik) is a 3rd-year Master’s candidate in Marine Biology, transitioning into the Marine Biology PhD program. In 2016 she received her BS in Environmental Science from Chatham University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

After graduating, she moved to Seward, working four years as the Regional Environmental Coordinator for the Chugach Regional Resources Commission (CRRC), helping the seven Tribes in Southcentral Alaska tackle their environmental goals. Simultaneously she worked at the Alutiiq Pride Shellfish Hatchery where she helped implement monitoring and sampling programs for the communities. After CRRC, Chelsea moved to Namibia, Africa where she led the marine mammal stranding program for the Namibian Dolphin Project. In her role, Chelsea oversaw strandings, data collection, volunteer/intern coordination, and outreach.

Later, Chelsea worked for the Aleut Community of St. Paul Island as Lead Disentanglement Coordinator, Bio-sampling Technician, and Island Sentinel. They disentangled over 125 northern fur seals (NFS) from marine debris. She led all bio-sampling efforts during the annual subsistence harvest and marine mammal strandings.

Her research is focused on population declines of the NFS, an important subsistence resource for the community of St. Paul Island, and, as a key predator in the region, an ecosystem sentinel.

She’s working to quantify subadult male NFS risk of exposure to environmental and anthropogenic contamination/toxins that could impact subsistence users in the region. Chelsea is specifically focused on harmful algal bloom toxins, saxitoxin and domoic acids, and microplastics, while investigating where subadult males are feeding spatially and trophically.

Chelsea lives on St. Paul Island June-October. Her samples are opportunistically collected from the annual laaqudax̂ subsistence harvest. She is grateful to live, work, study, and play as a guest on Unangax̂ lands of Tanax̂ Amix̂.


Photo of Lilian Hart

Lilian Hart

PhD Fisheries (Advisor: Courtney Carothers)

Characterizing opportunities for improving equity in fisheries management through the study of people, resources, and flows of knowledge.

Lilian is a first year PhD student at the ÃÛÌÒTV(ÃÛÌÒTV) in Juneau. She earned her BA in Environmental Studies and in Anthropology from the University of Washington in Seattle in 2012. Following work in volunteer management and program development, Lilian obtained a certificate in Geospatial Analysis from Weber State University while conducting research in watershed modeling and pollutant mapping. Lilian then completed a MS in Fisheries at ÃÛÌÒTV with Curry Cunningham, predicting juvenile salmon habitat using statistical models. The focus of Lilian’s PhD research emerged from her studies in applied fisheries science and observing the challenges of communication and decision-making across distinct scientific and social cultures.

Lilian’s research as a Rasmuson Fisheries Fellow will examine knowledge and power in Alaska fisheries management. Her research will center around two questions: how do networks of people, resources, and knowledge structure fisheries management spaces? What opportunities exist for improving equity in Alaska fisheries? Applying discourse analysis, schema development, and co-production of knowledge methods, Lilian’s research will pay particular attention to the use of ecosystem-based fisheries management as a knowledge framework and decision-making tool within the North Pacific Fishery Management Council (NPFMC). 


Photo of Julia MatteucciJulia Matteucci

MS Marine Biology  (Advisor: Kristen Gorman)

Migratory and winter movements and distributions of Pribilof Island Black-legged Kittiwakes and Thick-billed Murres.

Julia is a second-year marine biology M.S. student at the University of Alaska Fairbanks (ÃÛÌÒTV). She grew up in Houston, Texas and attended Colorado State University for her undergraduate studies. During this time Julia developed a passion for field research and participated in a summer field course in Colorado, study abroad program in Ecuador, and summer internship in Alaska to learn and hone these skills. She graduated in 2019 with a B.S. in Fish, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology and a minor in Spanish. For the next five years, Julia pursued seasonal work as a field biologist where she worked on mainly avian projects including waterfowl nest surveys and banding (Colorado and Alaska), Greater Sage-grouse banding and tracking (Nevada and Wyoming), wind farm mortality surveys (Iowa), and seabird surveys and shorebird banding and tracking (Alaska). 

At ÃÛÌÒTV, and in close collaboration with the Aleut Community of St. Paul Island (ACSPI), Julia is assessing the migratory and winter habitat use of Black-legged Kittiwakes and Thick-billed Murres breeding on St. Paul Island, Alaska. She is accomplishing this by equipping adult breeding individuals with archival geolocator tags that use ambient light levels to track birds' movements throughout the year. These data will be coupled with molecular sex determination and mercury and stable isotope analyses of collected blood and feather samples to determine if these characteristics are associated with variation in seasonal habitat use. Project results will support ACSPI in advocating for vital marine protections surrounding St. Paul Island, ensuring that management and conservation policies are informed by the community and grounded in the most thorough data available.


Photo of Noelle PicardNoelle Picard

MS Marine Biology (Advisor: Lara Horstmann)

To provide more pertinent information to subsistence communities regarding the MP concentrations and if there are significant health impacts tied to these MP levels.

Noelle grew up in Massachusetts and attended Saint Michael’s College in Vermont, where she graduated in 2019 with a B.S. in Biology and a minor in Chemistry. Following graduation, Noelle worked as a lab manager at the Geisel School of Medicine. She then worked as a field biologist studying various bird species. In 2022, Noelle began focusing on marine biology projects and spent a year studying comparative biology with a focus on gill remodeling. 

She joined CFOS in 2024 studying microplastic (MP) characteristics and concentrations in subsistence harvested beluga whales. She plans to compare these concentrations with stable isotope measurements to determine if there is a trophic level correlation. There is limited information on the accumulative properties of MP in beluga tissues, and this data may be pertinent to native subsistence communities. Noelle is working with the North Slope Borough Department of Wildlife Management to access beluga tissues and is sharing her findings with the  Borough so they can be informed of pertinent findings.

Noelle is currently studying plastic monomer chemical concentrations in beluga muscle, coupled with hormone levels involved in reproduction and development. These findings will provide insight into how chemicals leached from MP may impact overall individual, and population health of beluga whales and subsistence communities.