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Lila Schweinfurth

Lila Schweinfurth

Age: 18
Hometown: Portland, OR

Science: “Forecasting Biotoxin Levels from Harmful Algal Blooms to Mitigate Hazardous Exposure Using Two Decades of Shellfish and MODIS Satellite Data”

About Lila

I am a recent graduate of Oregon Episcopal School and will be attending Yale University in the fall as a Hahn Scholar. 

In addition to science, I am an avid violinist and performed with the Portland Youth Philharmonic for 9 years, served as Concertmaster of the 2020 Oregon All-State Orchestra, and represented Oregon in the 2020 All-National Symphony Orchestra. I also enjoy singing in a cappella and choir. 

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"I’m incredibly honored to be named a Davidson Fellow. I’m very grateful to the Davidson Institute for their recognition of my work, and I’m humbled to be joining such an amazing community. Thank you very much for this opportunity!"

Project Description

When I learned that Alfred Hitchcock’s classic movie, The Birds, was inspired by a real-life incident in which erratic birds ingested marine biotoxins that had moved up the food chain, I wanted to know if these biotoxins could be found along the Oregon Coast and specifically in the food I eat. To determine when and where these biotoxins produced by harmful algal blooms might occur, I examined 20 years of archived Oregon shellfish biotoxin data and combined these data with those from a NASA satellite. Using machine learning, I developed highly accurate models to predict dangerous levels of biotoxins up to 5 weeks in advance. Predictive models, like the ones developed in this study, can reduce toxin exposure and save lives by providing advance notice to individuals and communities as to the best times and locations for recreational shellfish harvesting. Hopefully these models can provide a blueprint for developing similar predictive models in areas of the world that lack sufficient resources to routinely test shellfish, thereby reducing biotoxin ingestion globally.

Deeper Dive

When I learned that Alfred Hitchcock’s classic movie, The Birds, was inspired by a real-life event in which birds ingested marine biotoxins that had moved up the food chain, I wanted to know if these biotoxins could be found along the Oregon Coast and in local shellfish. Ingesting high levels of these toxins can produce mild to moderate gastrointestinal/neurological symptoms—or in severe cases, death. My goal was to accurately predict when and where these biotoxins produced by harmful algal blooms might occur because such blooms are continuing to expand worldwide.

Unique to my independent research was the inclusion of two decades of previously unexplored and non-digitized shellfish biotoxin data that was retrieved from archival storage at the Oregon Department of Agriculture Food Safety Division. By combining these archived biotoxin data with publicly available NASA satellite data, my study was able to successfully predict high levels of biotoxins. As such, my predictive models offer a more direct, efficient, and accurate method for forecasting biotoxin levels.

These predictive models may be able to reduce toxin exposure and save lives by providing advance notice to individuals and communities as to the best times and locations for recreational shellfish harvesting. And because satellite data is collected across the globe, the customization of such models for other areas, especially those that lack sufficient resources to routinely test shellfish, could provide easily-implemented solutions for reducing biotoxin exposure worldwide.

Q&A

What is one of your favorite quotes?

“I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work.” — Thomas Edison

If you could be on any TV show, which one would it be?

Iron Chef as someone who tastes the food

What is your favorite tradition or holiday?

I always look forward to eating mooncakes with my family in early autumn.

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In The News

Portland, Ore. – The Davidson Fellows Scholarship Program has announced the 2021 scholarship winners. Among the honorees are 17-year-old Vedanth Iyer and 18-year-old Lila Schweinfurth, both of Portland. Only 20 students across the country to be recognized as scholarship winners each year.

Download the full press release here