NCSU Study Abroad Faculty Spotlight is on Dr. Susan Moore

Susan Moore on boat during study abroadDr. Susan Moore may be feeling some heat lately, but it is not just the summer sun. The NC State University Study Abroad Office is shining their Spotlight on Susan as this season's featured Faculty Director. Dr. Moore is Extension Associate Professor and Director of the Forestry &
Environmental Outreach Program in the Department of Forestry &
Environmental Resources in the College of Natural
Resources, and her  international experience includes work in Japan, forestry study
tours to Ecuador and Guatemala, and ongoing research and extension
work in Southern Chile.

Learn more about Susan, her Study Abroad Program in Southern Chile, and her advice to students!

 Find out what is happening in the Forestry and Environmental Outreach Program (FEOP), which is directed by Susan.

Susan Moore and fellow faculty in Chile 

Hands-on experiences create unique lessons in Nicaragua Study Abroad

by Dr. Chris MoormanNCSU students learned how to make tortillas. Whose is the best?

During spring break 2010, eight students in Fisheries and Wildlife Sciences and one student from Zoology traveled on a 9-day study abroad trip to Nicaragua to learn about the country’s people and culture, wildlife, ecotourism industry, and local coffee production. The unique opportunity was offered through a partnership between NCSU and EcoQuest Travels. Trip leaders Chris Moorman, John Connors, and John Gerwin facilitated student learning, but the hands-on experiences did most of the teaching. For the first five nights, the group stayed at the Finca Esperanza Verde outside of San Ramon, Nicaragua. The Finca has rustic but beautiful accommodations and fantastic Nicaraguan food. Finca Esperanza Verde is a shade-coffee plantation and hosts eco-tourists from countries around the world. While at the Finca, the group learned about shade-grown coffee production, captured and banded birds using mist nets, saw other wildlife such as an eyelash viper and olingos, and got to know the local Nicaraguan staff.

Two keel-billed toucans 
eating fruitThe next two nights, students stayed in Granada, the oldest settlement in Central America. The group visited two volcanoes in the area – the active Volcan Masaya and Volcan Mombacho. On the first afternoon in Granada, students took a sunset boat tour of Las Isletas, small islands in Lake Nicaragua that were created by a past eruption of Mombacho. The next day, the group visited Domitila Wildlife Reserve, the first private reserve created in Nicaragua. Domitila offers one of the best examples of dry, tropical forest in Central America. The last night of the trip, everyone stayed at Montibelli Nature Preserve near Managua.

Montibelli is another example of dry tropical forest but lies at a higher elevation than Domitila. While at Montibelli, students caught over six bats species in mist nets, saw two species of mouse opossums, and learned about pineapple production. The trip was a great success; the group saw or banded over 200 species of birds (over 70 individuals banded), saw or captured 23 species of mammals (heard or saw mantled howler monkeys at five different locations), and saw or captured 25 species of reptiles and amphibians. Although most Nicaraguans are very poor, they are friendly and welcoming. The students were excellent and each brought a unique perspective to the experience. Plans are to offer the trip again during spring break 2012.

– Excerpt from student journal – “… for the majority of the day, I wasn’t thinking about the travel or home. I had missed a few people, but the trip was still so vivid in my mind that it was hard to think of much else. If I had the money, I would have bought one of the Los Isletas islands and moved in permanently. The entire trip has just left my head swimming or that may be from the exhaustion of writing this at 1:00AM. Still, the trip has given me some sort of direction in my life. Whether for good or bad, I am no longer content to simply live my life. I used to see life as a sort of race where one tried to do their best till the end, but now I want to make my life meaningful, to have an impact. I don’t care if that impact is small or large, affecting one person or many, I just want to make a difference.”This female royal flycatcher was an incredible capture that did  
it’s cobra dance when in the hand

Read more about study abroad and international opportunities in the Department of Forestry and Environmental Resources.

 Learn more about Fisheries, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology at NC State University

 Read the latest edition of the NCSU Fisheries & Wildlife Newsletter

All photos courtesy of Dr. Chris Moorman (from top to bottom: NCSU students learned how to make tortillas; two keel-billed toucans eating fruit; female royal flycatcher was an incredible capture that did it’s cobra dance when in the hand; fruit bat; vine snake).

 Fruit bat

Vine snake

CNR Volunteers Help Habitat for Humanity – Wake

Myron Floyd volunteers on Habitat for Humanity -Wake house deconstruction projectOn a beautiful spring morning in May, volunteers from the NC State College of Natural Resources (CNR) went to work tearing apart a house on the shores of Lake Wheeler.  No, they weren’t crazed, they were in fact helping families in Wake County obtain a greener, less expensive way to obtain building materials by volunteering with Habitat for Humanity – Wake (HFH) on one of their de-construction projects. 

Many think of HFH as home builders, not destroyers, but the de-construction program offers opportunities for HFH to earn money for building projects plus provide an excellent service in “re-use” of building materials.  

remilled wood for use by HabitatAnd faculty and staff are not the only volunteers from the college, giving their time and expertise to Habitat for Humanity – Wake.  During spring semester, the student chapter of the Forest Products Society, along with several wood products faculty and graduate students, reprocessed untreated deck boards into interior baseboard moulding for Wake Habitat for Humanity. The boards were donated by Georgia Pacific after a drying study the wood products group did for GP.

4 volunteers from the NC State College of Natural Resources Volunteer for Habitat for Humnanity - Wake house deconstruction project.The May HFH deconstruction project's four faculty/staff volunteers [Dr. Myron Floyd (PRTM), Laura Johnson (ET), Melinda Hall (Business) and James Jeuck (Ext. Forestry)] are part of an ongoing program developed by the CNR's staff and faculty to come together and be of service to the community. 

Other projects in the past year have included sorting food donations at the Foodbank, staffing the Wake County Library book sale, cleaning up litter in local parks and more.  Over 30 members of the faculty and staff have turned out to participate with the CNR Volunteers, many for multiple projects.

4-H Teams Gearing up for the North Carolina Wildlife Habitat Evaluation Program State Competition

WHEP logo
Interest has been strong for the upcoming North Carolina Wildlife Habitat Evaluation Program (WHEP), April 24, 2010. Eighty junior and senior level youth from eight counties will compete in the 2010 State Competition at the Jordan Lake Educational State Forest in Chapel Hill, NC.

WHEP is a national 4-H program that teaches about the fundamentals of wildlife management, develops team  and leadership skills, and provides an opportunity for 4-H members to work with natural resource professionals.

NC WHEP is run out of NC State University Extension Forestry and has been growing every year since 2000.  "Our state teams are consistently placing within the top 10 in the nation," states Renee Strnad, Extension Forestry Environmental Educator and NC WHEP Organizer. The 2009 NC Team placed 6th Overall and 4th in the Written Wildlife Management Plan at the National Contest in Louisiana. An article written by previous national competitor and Henderson County 4-H club member, Caleb Worrell, appears in BlueRidgeNow.com and explains how his experiences with WHEP and other 4-H naturalist activities have shaped his interest in natural resources.  

NC WHEP is sponsored by the State Council of Quail Unlimited. Their sponsorship provides awards at the state level for teams and individuals, as well as covering the registration cost and some travel to the national contest. "It can be very expensive to send teams of six people across the country to compete at the national level," explains Strnad, "so in addition to studying and preparing for the national contest, the county representing North Carolina at the national level must do a lot of fundraising to help cover their travel costs."

The first place senior team from the State Competition this year will have the opportunity to represent North Carolina at the National WHEP Invitational in July in Los Alamos, New Mexico.

For more information, contact Renee Strnad at 919-515-5518 or renee_strnad@ncsu.edu 

New Recruiting Video from TAPPI showcases Paper Science & Engineering Careers

TAPPI logoDemonstrating their solid support for the industry and the college programs which prepare the future leaders of the paper industry, TAPPI has produced an exciting video to interest young folks in careers in the paper industry. "Five Reasons Why You Should Be A Paper Engineer" includes folks from NC State in the video and we're already using it to attract students to our paper science & engineering program.

Download the Video –  Flash    
See more recruiting materials –  TAPPI Career Center