Desert
                                  Life Up Close 
                                  Excerpt
                                  from It's A Living! Career News for Girls 
                                  by
                                  Ceel Publishing 
                                  
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                                Claudia
                                  Luke came home from her fifth-grade class one
                                  day and asked her mother, 
                                            "What do you call a person who studies
                                            animals?" They looked it up in the
                                            dictionary and found zoologist. 
                              
  Today
                                  Claudia is a zoologist and co-director of the
                                  Sweeney Granite Mountains Desert Research Center
                                  in California's Mojave Desert. She studies
                                  rare desert tortoises and other animals. Claudia
                                  is also a university professor. Her specialty
                                  is herpetology—the branch of zoology
                                  that studies reptiles and amphibians such as
                                  snakes, lizards, turtles, frogs, and salamanders.                               
                               When
                                  Claudia was a girl, her family liked to go
                                  backpacking. Claudia always wanted to learn
                                  about the mysterious lives of animals. "I thought
                                  if I was just sat still enough, I could be
                                  part of the animals around me," she says.   
                               Claudia's
                                  mother helped her find a course on how to identify
                                  birds. Her mother always believed in Claudia's
                                  dream to study animals. But getting her education
                                  wasn't always fun for Claudia. High school
                                  biology class turned out to be "boring, dry,
                                  and flat," says Claudia. So she decided to
                                  get some experience with people who were already
                                  studying animals. She studied one year in junior
                                  college and worked as a laboratory researcher.
                                  That's one job a zoologist or biologist might
                                  have, but Claudia didn't like lab work. She
                                  wanted to study animals in their natural environment. 
                                Then
                                  Claudia went to the University of California
                                  at Berkeley. She paid her own way to spend
                                  a month in Kenya, Africa, to study the black
                                  and white colobus monkey. Claudia loved it. 
                                The
                                  next summer she went to western Texas to work
                                  with a professor who studies a special kind
                                  of lizard. Claudia found lizards and then shot
                                  crickets through a straw to feed them. The
                                  professor wanted to find out if those lizards
                                  that got extra food lived longer. 
                                Another
                                  professor at Berkeley asked her to work with
                                  him as a graduate student and study herpetology.
                                  She spent six years in graduate school- the
                                  average time for students in her field - making
                                  her living by teaching part time. Teaching
                                  made her nervous at first. But when she stopped
                                  worrying so much about what students thought
                                  of her, she got good at it. 
                                To
                                  earn her doctorate (PhD) degree, Claudia decided
                                  to do research on lizards in the desert. She
                                  found the desert really is the place for her. "I
                                  like the extremes in temperature, the exposed
                                  honesty of the landscape. I like the feeling
                                  of being small, of being a part of something
                                  bigger." 
                                After
                                  graduation, Claudia worked as a consultant
                                  in the San Francisco area. Companies that wanted
                                  to develop land and needed to know about rare
                                  animals that lived there hired Claudia to look
                                  for these protected animals and write reports.
                                  It paid well, but Claudia wasn't satisfied,
                                  because she would write a report and never
                                  hear about the project again. 
                                After
                                  about four years, she and Jim Andre, who is
                                  her partner in work and in life, got the chance
                                  to be co-directors of the Desert Research Center
                                  in the Mojave. The center is one of 32 reserves
                                  managed by the University of California Natural
                                  Reserve System. Claudia, Jim, and two other
                                  people live in the desert, where the wild,
                                  undisturbed natural habitat is protected for
                                  education and scientific study. 
                                Claudia
                                  loves every part of her job. "Everything I
                                  do - whether it is administrative, research,
                                  scheduling, or fundraising - all relates back
                                  to protecting the area for research and education.
                                  I like to see the results of my efforts." As
                                  a field station director, she doesn't have
                                  a daily or weekly schedule; her job changes
                                  as new research projects begin. Claudia says
                                  the biggest reward about a career in research
                                  is knowing that "once you get the answer to
                                  something, you've got it for the first time
                                  ever." 
                                The
                                  Desert Research Center is in such a remote
                                  area that the nearest grocery store is more
                                  than 75 miles away. In the summer, Claudia
                                  says, she misses ice cream. She also misses
                                  going to restaurants and having friends drop
                                  by. But people do travel that far - friends,
                                  scientists, students - and they usually stay
                                  awhile. In her spare time, Claudia writes songs
                                  and paints. She and Jim like to run with their
                                  dog Brewer. 
                                by
                                    Stephenie Overman 
                                CLAUDIA
                                      SAYS: 
                                Start
                                  your study of nature near home with a place
                                  that is relatively wild - it could be the nearest
                                  park or your back yard. Read field guides and
                                  join outdoor groups. Observe and keep notes
                                  in a journal describing what you see. 
                                CHECKLIST
                                      - This career is for you if you... 
                               
                                
                                  - Love
                                      the outdoors, even when it's hot or cold
                                      or dirty. 
                                  
 - Like
                                      to be the first person to find out something
                                      new. 
                                  
 - Are
                                      willing to do the same thing over and over
                                      to be sure the experiment is right. 
                                  
 - Are
                                      determined to keep studying to get a master's
                                      degree or even a PhD. 
                                                              
  
                               
                               Salary 
                                Starting
                                  pay PhD: $13.37 per hour, $27,800 per year 
                                Source: Encyclopedia of Career and Vocational
                                Guidance (1997). 
                               
                               Excerpted
                                    from  It's
                                    a Living! Career News for Girls 
                                |