Christian Boudreaux to study climate change, conservation, genetics
The British government has named University of Mississippi senior Christian Boudreaux as a winner of a prestigious Marshall Scholarship, making him the university’s fourth Marshall scholar ever.
Created by the British Parliament in 1953, the Marshall Scholarship funds two years of American students’ study toward master’s degrees of their choosing in the United Kingdom.
Boudreaux, an Oxford native majoring in biology, plans to work toward master’s degrees in evolutionary genetics and marine systems and policies at the University of Edinburgh.
“I hope to use the Marshall Scholarship to further my understanding of genetic techniques and provide myself with a greater insight into the systems that are utilized to conserve and manage marine ecosystems,” he said. “The understanding of these two topics will facilitate my future research and management work.”
A Stamps Scholar, Boudreaux won a Goldwater Scholarship as a sophomore in 2023 and worked in a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration facility in San Diego through the Ernest F. Hollings Undergraduate Scholarship. Boudreaux was also named a Truman scholar this spring while studying abroad in Zanzibar through the Zanzibar Coastal Ecology and Natural Resource Management.
He founded Aqua Culture, a student organization at Ole Miss that works to promote and maintain healthy aquatic environments. As a freshman, Boudreaux also served as president of Hill Country Roots, a student organization that focuses on preserving Mississippi‘s forests and native trees.
“Christian is a superstar,” said Vivian Ibrahim, director of the Office of National Scholarship Advisement. “He really does care about the research, but he also cares about how we make science accessible and how we help the public really understand the work they’re doing.”
Studying the oceans is as important as it is fascinating, Boudreaux said. Sometimes called the lungs of the planet, Earth‘s oceans absorb nearly 90% of the heat generated by global warming and more than a quarter of the carbon humans produce.
“Many people do not realize the extent to which the ocean is buffering the worst effects of climate change,” he said. “Marine ecosystems are taking the brunt of climate change and it is imperative that we work to protect and conserve them to prevent their collapse.”
It is impossible to work as a biologist without also contending with the effects of climate change, Boudreaux said.
“In order to engage in meaningful science, in my eyes, it is up to us as scientists to take global change into account and work to develop strategies for addressing it,” he said.
Boudreaux said he hopes to use the degrees he earns at the University of Edinburgh to inform conservation practice and preserve marine ecosystems. After completing a doctoral degree, he hopes to work in NOAA, where his research and work will inform and shape policy.
“In my eyes, NOAA is the big leagues for an aspiring marine scientist,” he said. “Being a federal agency, they are foremost a public-serving institution that aims to provide the public with pertinent information about our atmosphere and oceans.
“Their mission statement is understanding the changing environment and working to conserve it, which is exactly what I hope to devote my career to. They lead the world in many aspects of environmental, marine and atmospheric science, and that is something that I hope to contribute to.”
By Clara Turnage