SNR student’s artwork draws attention to kingfisher struggles

Kinga Aletto, a junior in College of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources, holds her life-sized clay model of the Javan blue-banded kingfisher. Creating the model of the critically-endangered bird is part of her UCARE research project. Craig Chandl
Kinga Aletto, a junior in College of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources, holds her life-sized clay model of the Javan blue-banded kingfisher. Creating the model of the critically-endangered bird is part of her UCARE research project. Craig Chandl

Kinga Aletto recently combined her interest in art and passion for wildlife in her UCARE project on the Javan blue-banded kingfisher.

Aletto, a pre-veterinary medicine and University of Nebraska-Lincoln School of Natural Resources fisheries and wildlife major from Sarasota, Florida, has long wanted to work with wildlife. Her search for a school with a good agriculture pre-veterinary program and a rifle team led her to UNL.

“The school is really nice,” she said. “I love it here.”

A conservation biology professor opened Aletto’s eyes to the struggles of small endangered species, such as the kingfisher, a tropical bird typically found in Indonesia.

“They said one of the main reasons why some of these [endangered] species aren’t able to get help is because people just don’t know about them,” she said. “It’s kind of like they need a way to put this species’ struggles and what it’s going through out to the mainstream media.”

When one of Aletto’s art professors, Eddie Dominguez, asked her to be a part of the Undergraduate Creative Activities and Research Experience program, she saw an opportunity to bring awareness to an endangered species through art.

Aletto said she likes art as a form of creating awareness because it resonates with her personally.

“It’s almost something like pandas,” Aletto said. “You can read all the issues they’re going through, but when you see a picture of a panda sitting in this landscape where there’s nothing there, you’re more likely to be like … ‘I didn’t realize it was this bad.’”

Aletto worked with Dominguez to craft the kingfisher out of clay.

“He’s a great professor, and I enjoyed working with him,” she said. “I had never met a professional artist … never been inside a professional artist’s studio, so it was really cool to see how it worked.”

Despite not being an art major, Aletto said her UCARE project taught her valuable lessons.

“[I learned] work ethic,” she said. “With art, you have to discuss your thought processes … Working with Eddie, I had to explain myself a lot, which I’ll have to do if I’m a vet … so it was a lot of people skills, conversation, work ethic.”

Aletto aspires to work with large exotic animals and with conservation efforts both domestically and internationally.

- Kateri Hartman, University Communication