A group of West St. Paul middle-schoolers spent mornings during their spring break spritzing geckos and salamanders with water, feeding beetle larvae to a skink and testing the water quality in tropical fish tanks.
And they did it all without leaving their middle school.
As part of the Marine Team, a club at Heritage E-STEM Magnet School, kids get to care for an exotic menagerie of fish and reptiles, including a 13-foot Burmese python named Kaa. And their responsibilities don't end when school is on break.
"I think in part it's an interest club, but there's also an education part to it. Overall, it's about getting kids interested in science," said Terry Doud, Marine Team adviser and middle-school science teacher. "For some of them, it's a possible career later on."
The club was started three years ago by Doud, who has been interested in fish and reptiles since he was in high school. Today, the club has about 80 members in grades five through eight, with two other science teachers, Tom Schlehuber and Nick Gross, also serving as advisers.
"I think kids are very interested in living things like this. And there's such a diversity here, there's something for everyone," Doud said. "They're able to be in almost constant contact with them this way."
All students can be members as long as they're willing to come in mornings before school — Tuesdays are for "critter care" and Thursdays are for fish. The club occasionally organizes other after-school activities, like snorkeling trips to Minnesota Sea Life Aquarium at Mall of America.
"We get so many opportunities to do things. It's not like any other club, and it's fun doing stuff with your friends and taking care of animals," said Bella Nelson, a seventh-grader.