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Blue Devil of the Week: A Conservation Biologist on Duke鈥檚 Coastal Campus

Andy Read, director of the Duke Marine Lab, documents the effects of human activities on marine animals

Andy Read attaches a Digital Acoustic Tag to a short-finned pilot whale about 35 miles east of Cape Hatteras to study the behavior and ecology of the deep-diving whales. Photo courtesy of Andy Read.
Andy Read attaches a Digital Acoustic Tag to a short-finned pilot whale about 35 miles east of Cape Hatteras to study the behavior and ecology of the deep-diving whales. Photo courtesy of Andy Read.

Name: Andy Read

Position: Director, Duke Marine Lab

Years at Duke: 27

What he does at Duke: As director of the , Andy Read oversees the day-to-day operation of the campus on Pivers Island in Beaufort, North Carolina, with about 120 faculty, staff and students on the coastal campus each day.

鈥淓verything that happens on main campus, maybe with the exception of basketball, we do here,鈥 Read said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 running a small campus, with the added degree of difficulty of hurricanes.鈥

Read, the Stephen A. Toth Professor of Marine Biology, has research interests in the conservation biology of marine mammals, seabirds, and sea turtles, documenting the effects of human activities on species that live in and around the ocean through experiments and field work. Recently, president Joe Biden  Read to serve on the which provides oversight for marine mammal policies and programs carried out by federal regulatory agencies.

A favorite aspect of his role is teaching, which puts him into the field with students to explore the applications of course material, including observing dolphins and whales miles out at sea, performing a dolphin postmortem to understand its anatomy, and examining whale bones.

With an interactive teaching style, Read was recognized in 2021 with a Duke teaching award, ranking him among the top 5 percent in the Natural Sciences Category.Andy Read is the director of the Duke Marine Lab. Photo courtesy of Andy Read.

鈥淚 love teaching at Duke,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hen I interviewed here in 1995, the faculty who were interviewing me, who later became my colleagues, were telling me how extraordinary Duke students were. I thought, 鈥榦h, maybe they鈥檙e blowing smoke a little bit,鈥 but it鈥檚 true.鈥

Read visits the Durham campus to meet with graduate students, advisees and sometimes to lecture at the But working by the ocean is his favorite place, where he has a moment of gratitude driving into work over the bridge every day.

鈥淚鈥檓 lucky,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 get to see the ocean outside my window, and we have dolphins go by the lab regularly. We get the cool summer sea breezes, which is nice. It鈥檚 a lovely place to work.鈥

Best advice received: When Read settled into a career at Duke and began to worry over whether he would achieve tenure, then-colleague Marie Lynn Miranda gave him some advice that shaped his journey.

鈥淪he told me that you should just do what you love and everything else will take care of itself,鈥 Read said. 鈥淚f you do what you love, and you鈥檙e passionate about it, it鈥檒l be fine. So, I stopped worrying about whether I was going to get tenure or not 鈥 I did 鈥 but I think it鈥檚 really good advice to follow your heart.鈥

What he loves about Duke: While Read enjoys teaching and research, he said the caring Duke community, including everyone who responded after almost a dozen Marine Lab buildings were , has made his time at Duke special. From the commitment of students to their studies to the dedication of faculty and staff to keep a unique campus running, he loves the tight-knit community.

鈥淲e have a supportive community because we鈥檙e three hours away from Durham,鈥 Read said. 鈥淚t can feel like a long way sometimes, so we really support each other really well.鈥

Members of the clean up crew after Hurricane Florence posed for a photo at the Duke Marine Lab in 2018. Photo courtesy of Andy Read. Most memorable day at work: In September 2018, Hurricane Florence wreaked havoc on the Duke Marine Lab campus, pelting buildings with winds that reached 106 miles per hour at nearby Cape Lookout and left up to 24 inches of rain.

The storm left the most damage on the lab鈥檚 facilities since it opened in 1938, including ripping back the roof of the Repass Center, one of the lab鈥檚 main teaching facilities, and causing water damage to other buildings and dormitories.

When it was safe to do so, even as many of their houses were damaged and electricity remained out, faculty and staff who worked at the Duke Marine Lab returned to the coastal campus when blue skies returned to assess damage and rebuild the campus. They were later joined by others from the Nicholas School of the Environment and colleagues in Durham.

Read was moved by how the community came together to help, from Duke Dining staff cooking lunch for everyone, to Facilities Management helping to assess and damage so the campus could resume operation.

鈥淚t just made me appreciate working in a place where people have shared values and a sense of community that we all looked out for each other鈥︹ said Read, who was part of the for its hurricane response. 鈥淲hen you can go to work and know folks have your back, it鈥檚 really nice.鈥

Something unique in his workspace: The ocean is Read鈥檚 workspace. That means he gets to venture out in a 30-foot research boat called The Barber, named after Richard T. Barber, an emeritus oceanographer at the Marine Lab.Andy Read, left, sits on the front of The Barber, a 30-foot research boat for the Duke Marine Lab. Photo courtesy of Andy Read.

Read鈥檚 favorite place to take the boat is 40 miles east of Cape Hatteras, out into the blue water of the Gulf Stream.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 seriously my happy place,鈥 Read said. 鈥淲e go out past all the charter boats, where they鈥檙e fishing, so we鈥檙e off by ourselves in the blue water with whales. That makes me very happy.鈥

When he鈥檚 not at work, he likes to: Read lives on a farm about 20 minutes away from the Beaufort campus, in an area called Down East, where he and his wife care of a large vegetable garden, fruit and pecan trees and chickens. They also have two wild gelding ponies named Soprano and Jair, who came from Shackleford Banks, an undeveloped barrier island off the coast of North Carolina.When he's not at work, Andy Ready attends to his garden or his ponies, Soprano, foreground, and Jair, background, in Down East, North Carolina. Photo courtesy of Andy Read.

鈥淭he farm keeps us pretty busy,鈥 Read said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 how I decompress when I get back from work. I go work in the garden, weed or harvest veggies.鈥

Is there a colleague at Duke who has an intriguing job or goes above and beyond to make a difference? Nominate that person for Blue Devil of the Week.