Morgan Calahan (Ecology, Evolution and Behavior Ph.D.) and Antone Chacartegui (Computing Ph.D.)
Two Boise State graduate students won National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program awards, beginning in fall 2025. Antone Chacartegui (Computing Ph.D.) and Morgan Calahan (Ecology, Evolution and Behavior Ph.D.) won the fellowships, which recognize outstanding graduate students with the potential to make significant contributions to STEM fields.
“Boise State’s graduate students have historically had an extraordinary track record in receiving GRFP awards. In a year when all federal awards are down, including 25% fewer GRFP awards, the competitiveness of Morgan Calahan’s and Antone Chacartegui’s proposals is a testament to the exceptional quality of graduate education at Boise State,” said Graduate College Dean Scott Lowe.
With these fellowships, Chacartegui and Calahan will work on problems of critical importance to our region and the globe. The NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program provides a stipend and tuition support for three years over a five-year fellowship period.
Antone Chacartegui
Chacartegui earned an MS in Mathematics from Boise State in May 2025, before entering the Computing Ph.D. program this fall. As an MS in Mathematics student, he studied with Associate Professor and Computing Ph.D. Co-Director Michal Kopera, researching machine-learning-assisted adaptive solvers for partial differential equations. He adapted work from an MIT-led team of mathematicians and extended it to shallow water equations
As he works towards his Ph.D. Chacartegui will apply that work to full ocean models with continued support from Kopera. His efforts will support previously inaccessible high-resolution adaptive simulations of ocean processes. It will impact weather forecasting, extreme weather resilience and our understanding of oceans as part of the Earth system.
“I would like to thank my Mom and Dad for all their support. I would particularly like to thank my advisor Michal Kopera and Donna Calhoun, who has mentored me throughout my time at Boise State. Finally I would like to thank the mathematics and physics departments at Boise State for all their support,” Chacartegui said.
Morgan Calahan
Calahan is a second-year Ecology, Evolution and Behavior Ph.D. student studying the Columbian sharp-tailed grouse with guidance from her advisor, Assistant Professor Stephanie Galla. Calahan’s work explores sharp-tailed grouse genomics, shedding light on genetic diversity and adaptive capacity in the species.
The Columbian sharp-tailed grouse were once abundant through the Intermountain West, spanning from Colorado through British Columbia. However, their numbers fell throughout the 20th century and today the species occupies a fraction of its former territory. Conservation efforts are underway across the American west.
Though Calahan studies these birds at the smallest level — their genetics — her work has implications for those regional conservation efforts.
“Genetic diversity is important for adapting to change,” Calahan said. “So understanding declining species from a genetic and genomic perspective is really important for conservation and managing with that in mind.”