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Meg Lowman leading nature walk at Myakka on Friday, Dec. 29 at 2 PM

December 8th, 2006

Hike off holiday dinner and discover Florida’s forest canopy

Looking for a way to lose those extra holiday pounds? Discover the wonders of Florida’s forest canopy at 2 p.m. Friday, Dec. 29, during a 90-minute nature walk with Professor of Biology and Environmental Studies Dr. Meg Lowman and her New College of Florida Conservation Biology Students. Lowman will lead families as they traverse the canopy walkway through the treetops at Myakka River State Park , 13207 S.R. 72, Sarasota .

Space for this walk is limited to 75, so call to reserve a spot. If the walk is filled, future walks are available. Participants should wear comfortable walking shoes that can get wet. Bring a light jacket, a hat, sun screen, insect repellent and drinking water Binoculars, camera and a hand lens are optional. Participants should meet in the parking lot of Myakka’s canopy walkway. There is a park entry fee.

Designated as a “Wild and Scenic” river by the state legislature in 1985, the Myakka River is one of only two rivers in the state of Florida to receive this prestigious title. Myakka is one of the state’s oldest and largest parks, protecting 58 square miles of wetlands, prairies, hammocks and pinelands.

For more information about this or other nature walks, contact the Sarasota County Call Center at 861-5000 and ask for Natural Resources. For more information about Myakka River State Park, visit:
http://www.floridastateparks.org/myakkariver/default.cfm.

Meg Lowman interview in Smithsonian

November 28th, 2006

An interview with Meg Lowman is in the December issue of Smithsonian magazine:

Margaret Lowman, of the New College of Florida, pioneered forest ecology by building the first canopy walkway in North America, in 1991. She recalls her adventures as a scientist and single parent in It’s a Jungle Up There.

Why spend time in trees?

Almost 50 percent of life on earth is estimated to live in tree canopies, yet this was an unexplored region until about 25 years ago. Much of my work has involved solving the challenge of just getting into the treetops: inventing gadgets, refining hot air balloon design, creating canopy walkways, working from cherry pickers and construction cranes. Once up there, I discovered that insects eat four times more leaf material than we imagined.

Full interview on the Smithsonian Magazine website


PDF version of the interview from magazine

Amazon Rainforest Workshop lead by Dr. Meg Lowman in June, 2007

September 29th, 2006

AMAZON RAINFOREST WORKSHOP

DEPARTURE DATE: JUNE 25, 2007
Group Leader – DR. MEG LOWMAN

Meg on Rainforest Walkway during sunsetUnique, active, and fun! This expedition is an eye-opening introduction to the environmental and cultural aspects of the Amazon Rainforest and river system. The program is a Third World experience that is safe, comfortable, and accessible. The itinerary offers travelers a window on scientific discovery. Intercultural interactions are coordinated to be engaging and meaningful during the Amazon Library visit, Culture & Craft Fair, and Village Service Project.

PROGRAM FEATURES
You’ll be immersed in field experiences at four rainforest lodge facilities in the Amazon basin of Northern Peru:

  • Ascend over 115 feet on a 1/4-mile Rainforest Canopy Walkway, one of the few of its kind in the New World.
  • Visit indigenous communities and contribute to the well being of people who live on the Amazon River.
  • Identify the many ecosystem partnerships of one of the most biologically diverse environments on our earth
  • Engage all of your senses to observe the unique flora and fauna of the Amazon Rainforest.
  • Use hand lenses, binoculars, maps, taxonomic keys for identification, and simple field equipment with the help of
  • Dr. Lowman and our experienced Naturalist Guides to learn about:
    • Insect Camouflage & Mimicry
    • Neotropical Butterflies
    • Rainforest Canopy Research
    • Rainforest Conservation
    • Neotropical Birds & Migration
    • Reptiles and Amphibians
    • Rainforest Ecosystem Comparisons
    • Amazon River System, Geology and Soils
    • Medicinal Plants
    • Orchids & Bromeliads

The 2007 land cost for this workshop is $1898 and the international flight roundtrip Lima ~ $750-$800.
Space is limited, so reserve your place early.
Contact: Dr. Frances Gatz, Environmental Expeditions, 9335 Fraser Avenue, Silver Spring, Maryland 20910
Phone: 301-585-7027 or toll free at 1-800-669-6806

For More Information:
PDF Flyer
Travel2Learn

A Case Study of a Mom-Scientist: Canopy Meg

September 1st, 2006

From ScienceCareers.org:

The decision to mesh motherhood with a nascent career as an environmental biologist wasn’t one that Margaret Dalzwell Lowman (AKA Canopy Meg) had the luxury of choosing. Rather, it was a lifestyle born out of necessity.

Full Article

2006 Lowell Thomas Awards Dinner: Save The Date - October 18

August 14th, 2006

THE PRESIDENT, DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS OF
THE EXPLORERS CLUB & ROLEX WATCH U.S.A., INC.
Request the honor of your company at the 2006 Lowell Thomas Awards Dinner DISCOVERIES IN THE TREETOPS
Wednesday, October 18, 2006
Cipriani Wall Street, New York City

The Lowell Thomas Dinner awards are presented by Rolex and the President of The Explorers Club, to groups of explorers who have distinguished themselves in unique ways. This year’s honorees have made important discoveries in the world’s “canopies”, from rain forests, to jungles, to the tallest trees nestled in clouds, where a rich biodiversity hangs…in the treetops.

Seating for the dinner is on first-come, first-served basis; seating requests require advance payment.
For reservations, please contact The Explorers Club, Telephone: 212-628-8383; E-Mail: events@explorers.org.
More information or to reserve seats online: http://www.explorers.org/spec_events/ltd/ltd2006/ltd2006.php.

INVITATIONS TO BE MAILED IN AUGUST

2006 ESA Annual Meeting in Memphis, Tennessee - August 6-11

August 1st, 2006

91st ESA Annual Meeting in Memphis, Tennessee - August 6-11, 2006

The location of the 2006 ESA meeting is Memphis, Tennessee, the “Birthplace of Rock ‘n’ Roll” and “Home of the Blues”. In ecology, as in the music world, there are people whose ideas and work have become so widely accepted and established that they have achieved the status of icons – the ‘rock stars’ of ecology. This is apparent from the packed rooms of ESA meeting sessions in which these ecological rock stars are presenting. At the same time, there are also always people who bring new ideas or approaches to the study of ecology – the upstarts – and whose ideas may sometimes challenge those of the icons.

Read More

The Association for Tropical Biology Annual Meeting in China

August 1st, 2006

The Association for Tropical Biology (ATB) Annual Meeting:

The annual meeting in 2006 will be held, for the first time ever in China, from July 18-21, 2006. The theme of the meeting will be “Tropical Biology: meeting the needs of changing tropical ecosystems”. Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden (XTBG) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) will host the meeting at the Harbour Plaza-Kunming.

More Details

The Second Meg Lowman Treetop Camp

August 1st, 2006

The Elmira Star-Gazette takes a look at the second Meg Lowman Treetop Camp at Tanglewood Nature Center:

A close look at nature was a way 12 girls could appreciate the opportunities around them as they attended the second Meg Lowman Treetop Camp at Tanglewood Nature Center and Museum this week.

The camp ended Friday afternoon with a glass-working session, a look at photographs the campers took earlier in the day and a gigantic water balloon fight.

Full Article

Treetop Camp

Treetop Camp

The Weather Breakers?

July 16th, 2006

The Weather Breakers?
A scientist from Down Under visits Florida

We walk on earth,

We look after,

Like rainbow sitting on top.

But something underneath,

Under the ground.

We don’t know.

You don’t know.

What do you want to do?

If you touch,

You might get cyclone, heavy rain or flood.

Not just here,

You might kill someone in another place.

You might kill him in another country.

You cannot touch him.

– Big Bill Neidjie,

“Gagadju Man”

This Aboriginal poem interprets how mining in the Australian outback poisoned their environment for subsequent generations. In saying “what do you want to do?” it implies that people today have the power to influences the lives of the next generation or even someone living halfway around the world. The trickle-down effects of altering ecosystems are global, as we are now learning with respect to climate change.

Professor Tim Flannery, Australian scientist, expands on the wisdom of this Aboriginal poem in his new book, “The Weather Makers.” Flannery, one of a new breed of planetary heroes, distilled the complex issue of global warming into a clear message when visiting Florida last month as part of his book tour. His Sarasota public lecture was sponsored by Sarasota News and Books, Selby Gardens and Sarasota Catering Co. He also spoke on radio station WSLR. Tony Blair, prime minister of Great Britain, said, “All who read ‘The Weather Makers’ will be left wiser and able to appreciate how fragile our climate is and how it is this generation who must act to protect it.”

Flannery hails from “Down Under.” When Flannery was only 8, a curator at the South Australian Museum put a dinosaur bone in his young hand. Bitten with the bug of scientific curiosity, he pursued a career as a paleontologist (a scientist who studies the past using fossils). Climate is one of the most important clues to life in the past, which probably explains why Flannery has dedicated his life to the history of climate. In his book, he claims that uncertainty in global climate can be summed up in two words: “air pollution.” Human beings have used our atmosphere as a “dumping grounds,” and now that has become what Flannery called “a polluted cesspool.”

Not only does air pollution cause health risks such as asthma and allergies, but it is also warming our planet. What once comprised the perfect composition of 280 ppm (parts per million) atmospheric carbon for creatures to thrive (before smokestacks and cars) has now reached 375 ppm and rising. So what?

It is easy to assume that the impacts of this warming trend are only occurring far away at the poles with isolated instances such as reported ice melts, starving polar bears and the inability of a few million penguins to reach their nesting grounds. In his book, Flannery writes that this is not the case. Climate change does not discriminate by race, creed, country, or economic status.

Flannery explains that the atmosphere inhales and exhales, almost like a living organism. Every spring with the onset of photosynthesis, which utilizes carbon dioxide, the global levels of carbon dioxide in our atmosphere decrease. In autumn when the leaves fall, the opposite occurs. These seasonal levels are part of the natural dynamics of our atmosphere. But with the advent of modern agricultural practices, clearing and burning of forests, and most recently industrialization, carbon dioxide has accumulated abnormally in the air.

A key data set in the history of climate change, illustrated in “The Weather Makers,” is a curve created by climatologist Charles Keeling, who mapped the annual levels of carbon dioxide in our atmosphere for more than 40 years. Flannery calls the Keeling curve “the ‘Silent Spring’ of climate change” because of its importance in illustrating the alarming, recent increases in greenhouse gases.

The book also explains the importance of Earth’s carrying capacity, a principle that defines how many people can be supported by our planet’s finite resources. In 1961, our population of 3 billion people used half the resources of Earth. By 1986, 5 billion people required 100 percent of our planet’s resources to survive, meaning that our carrying capacity had been reached. And by 2050, it is predicted that 9 billion people will require double the Earth’s resources to sustain current lifestyles.

Over-use of natural resources will eventually lead to serious problems, but increased carbon dioxide in the atmosphere will likely cause extinction first, Flannery contends. Many coral reefs are dying, because the water is warming. Flannery explains that at the poles, however, “climate change is occurring now at twice the rate seen anywhere else.” The drowning of polar bears on thinning ice caps is one example of death from rapid climate change.

Despite his dire predictions, Flannery brings a glimmer of hope with examples of how climate change can be reversed with existing technologies. He cited the fact that downsizing American cars could reverse the blanket of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. For example, drivers of the Toyota Land Cruiser who traded for a Toyota Prius would lower his or her carbon dioxide emissions by 70 percent, more than the level required to reverse climate change. If more institutions in Florida (and he called on churches to set an example) used solar panels, the extinction of many species would be averted. Wind is another exciting, non-carbon-based, source of energy for the future. If governments adopted carbon taxes, whereby industries paid a tax whenever they use our atmosphere to dump their industrial waste, then economic incentives would predictably drive the repair of our planet. In this case, many people will become rich from alternative energies!

During my radio interview with Flannery, he talked wistfully about his childhood when kids worshipped war heroes, admiring their stories of courage and valor in battle. He says that our children and grandchildren will likely base their definition of heroes by asking, “Grandpa, what did you do to reduce your carbon emissions?”

The heroes of this generation will be those people who acted quickly and with vision.The latest news from the British Antarctic Survey indicates that the world’s largest iceberg, the West Antarctic ice sheet, is showing initial signs of destabilization. If this iceberg melts, sea level would rise by at least 15 feet. Do the math. If Floridians hope to enjoy a coastal lifestyle in the future, carbon dioxide emissions need immediate reduction. If we can make that happen, our grandchildren may refer to us as “the real heroes of the planet.”

Star-Gazette interview with Meg Lowman

July 14th, 2006

From the Star-Gazette:

Elmira native Meg Lowman is a scientist, author, educator and internationally recognized rain forest researcher. She has globe-hopped from rain forests in Africa to Australia to Peru, specializing in the study of plant-insect relationships and the ecology of rain-forest canopies (life among the treetops). The Florida resident will return to her hometown to lecture and sign books Sunday at Tanglewood Nature Center and on Monday will kick off the first day of the Meg Lowman Treetops Camp for youth at the nature center. Star-Gazette reporter Erin Cary conducted this e-mail interview with her.

Read the interview here




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