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by Staff Writers Greenbelt MD (JPL) Sep 15, 2010
Elena Kukavskaya's love of nature began at an early age, in a very cold and faraway place. She was raised in Siberia's third largest city - Krasnoyarsk - and as a child considered herself "an urban resident." So it was nice to escape to the country. "From little up, I love nature and enjoy the beautiful colors of the autumn landscape of the national reserve near Krasnoyarsk," she says. That love evolved into a passion to learn more about the wildfires that routinely sweep Russia's vast forestland. Today, Kukavskaya is a researcher with the Siberian branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences' V. N. Sukachev Institute of Forest in Krasnoyarsk. She's also a newly minted Fulbright scholar who just travelled 7,000 miles (11,265 km) across 12 time zones to spend the next six months at NASA Langley working through the National Institute of Aerospace in Hampton, Va. While here, Kukavskaya will work on a project called "Siberian Biomass Burning Emission Estimates" in the Science Directorate's Chemistry and Dynamics Branch. "What I am going to do, I will enhance the methodology to obtain carbon emissions due to fires, to obtain more accurate data of carbon emissions," she said on a recent morning at Langley. Carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide are greenhouse gases produced naturally, by industrial activity and by wildfires. They are a major contributor to global warming. Russian wildfires are especially significant because two-thirds of the world's boreal, or northern, forests are in Siberia. Most of the Earth's terrestrial carbon is stored in them, in both living and dead vegetation. Wildfires are growing more frequent in Siberia. Global warming already has been attributed to increased forest destruction in eastern Siberia and other northern regions. A vivid glimpse of the possible future occurred this summer, as out-of-control wildfires and record drought and high temperatures tormented Russians. In Siberia, Kukavskaya was part of research teams at experimental fires. The fire areas, typically several acres, were then set ablaze for researchers like Kukavskaya to study. The main goal of such experiments is to estimate and monitor fire effects on carbon cycling, emissions and forest health and sustainability.
Into the wild white yonder Kukavskaya's mentor, Amber Soja, said women seem particularly attracted to this type of adventurous research. "The ones that often work in the toughest places are women," said Soja, a wildfire researcher who supports the Science Directorate through the National Institute of Aerospace. "I'm not sure why women are attracted to this, but we are." Soja has high praise for her protege. She and Kukavskaya met in Siberia and worked together on the FIRE BEAR (Fire Effects in the Boreal Eurasia Region) Project. "Here we are now with a highly accomplished scientist," she said.
Growing up in Siberia Since arriving in the U.S., Kukavskaya has settled in Poquoson, bought a car, and gone swimming - another passion - at the Virginia Beach oceanfront. It was her first contact with the Atlantic, though she has travelled to the U.S. twice for scientific conferences. Her interests outside work include yoga, swimming, caring for her cat, Emmy, and hanging out with friends. She's been too busy defending her doctoral dissertation to enjoy much free time. "But if I had the time, I try to use it to improve my English knowledge. What I really like is going in Russia to French courses. I very like it." It's obvious Kukavskaya enjoys what she does professionally about as much as what she does outside work. "I am always excited about new experiences, and like to know the world around us," she said. "Nowadays, I cannot see my life unengaged with studying of fires and their effect on forest ecosystems and environment."
Related Links - Darwin Today At TerraDaily.com
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