People

Michael Bevins Cameron

Graduate Laboratory Assistant
School of Life Sciences
Postgraduate Research Student
School of Life Sciences
 Michael Bevins Cameron

Profile

Ask me about
  • Atlantic salmon

Biography

I graduated from the University of Essex in 2023 with a first-class BSc in Marine Biology. During my degree I gained valuable experience working in a laboratory via a work placement as a research assistant, performing fish dissections, tissue isotope chemistry and data analysis. I became increasingly interested in fish ecology and behaviour, and continued this work into my final year project. For my honours thesis, I focused on Atlantic salmon movements and provenance assignments, analysing otolith (earstone) elemental concentrations using laser ablation inductively coupled mass spectrometry. I worked on multiple populations around the British Isles to track their lifetime movement patterns, size at emigration, and trace their natal origins. Atlantic salmon is an important species ecologically, economically, and culturally, yet they are in widespread decline, with Scottish populations decreasing by around 40% over the past 40 years. Shifts in food webs, warming, predation, phenological prey mismatch, and contaminants are all stressors, while renewable energy developments are also transforming areas that salmon migrate through. Tagging and trawling studies suggest planned developments intercept primary migratory pathways of emigrating juveniles and returning adults, which may affect homing ability and survival. To assess if particular populations are at greater risk of impact and if adult straying rates change following construction, new tools to accurately identify river-of-origin of individuals caught at planned or existing development sites and post-spawned adults sampled in rivers are required to aid development of effective management plans. My PhD project will use otolith elemental concentrations and eye lens stable isotope ratios to develop a novel multi-marker approach for assigning salmon to their river or catchment of origin, while also testing if non-lethal sampling can be used to assign post-smolts with similar accuracy.

Qualifications

  • BSc Marine Biology University of Essex (2023)

Research and professional activities

Thesis

Developing novel chemical tools to assign salmon origin and assess potential impacts of Scottish offshore windfarms along migratory corridors

Supervisor: Dr Anna Sturrock

Contact

michael.bevinscameron@essex.ac.uk

Location:

Colchester Campus