NC Wildlife Habitat Evaluation Program (WHEP) Team Places among Top at Nationals

Renee L Strnad, NC State University – Extension Forestry
NC Project Learning Tree Coordinator
NC Certified Environmental Educator

Media Release

The North Carolina Wildlife Habitat Evaluation Program team traveled to Zwolle, Louisiana, for the 2009 National WHEP Contest in July. Team members were Will Buslinger from Caswell County, Melissa Gold from Guilford County, and Rebecca Warren from Haywood County.  Ruth Buslinger and Tanya Gold were the team coaches. Sixty-two youth from 16 states participated in the national contest with events including wildlife identification, general wildlife knowledge, and on-site recommendation of wildlife management practices. Additionally, teams created a written wildlife management plan, which each team member individually defended before a panel of judges.    

The team returned to North Carolina with many awards, including 6th Place Overall and 4th in the Written Wildlife Management Plan event.  Ms. Gold placed 13th in the Overall individual scores. Mr. Buslinger placed 8th in Oral Defense of the Wildlife Plan, and 17th Overall in individual scores.

Congratulations!!!

The 2009 North Carolina Wildlife Habitat Evaluation Program Team

Pictured above: 2009 North Carolina Wildlife Habitat Evaluation Program Team at the
National Contest in Zwolle, Louisiana.  Left to Right:  Ruth Buslinger
(coach), Rebecca Warren,  Will Buslinger, Melissa Gold, and Tanya Gold
(coach).

WHEP logo
Learn more about North Carolina WHEP – Wildlife Habitat Evaluation Program and other great 4-H Programs!

West Johnston HS Team Wins Second Place and $20K at Envirothon

The talented West Johnston High School Envirothon team, the Sequoias, placed second overall out of 45 teams from the U.S. and Canada at the 2009 Canon Envirothon held in Asheville, NC, last week. A team from Penncrest High School in Pennsylvania took first place. This year marks the best showing ever for a North Carolina team at the North American Envirothon competition.

Each student member of the Sequoias, Stephanie Tolar, Frankie Johnson, Lewis Braswell, Erin Lineberger and Thomas Lineberger, was presented with a $4,000 college scholarship. Sponsored by the Johnston County Soil and Water Conservation District, the team’s advisor is Melody Lineberger and their team coordinator is Donna Tolar. A number of North Carolina State University faculty and staff had the honor of providing guidance to the team throughout the year.

Envirothon is actually the culmination of a series of competitions that began during the past school year, testing understanding of complex environmental issues and knowledge in five technical areas: aquatics, forestry, soils, wildlife, and biodiversity. The Sequoias scored 1st in three of the five areas – forestry, soils, and biodiversity.

Erin Lineberger, who will be starting as a freshman in the Department of Forestry and Environmental Resources this fall, was recently named as an NC State University Park Scholar. The Park Scholarship program  is among America’s most prestigious undergraduate merit scholarship programs.

The Sequoias Envirothon Team

The Sequoias members pictured above left to right Melody Lineberger, team advisor, Lewis Braswell, Frankie Johnson, Thomas Lineberger, Erin Lineberger, and Stephanie Tolar.

College of Natural Resources Researchers Featured in "Fresh Water" issue of RESULTS Magazine

From FRESH WATER: Research to protect the Earth's Life Support System – RESULTS magazine, Summer 2009

Keeping it Clean DownstreamDr. Perver Baran and Dr. Hugh Devine  – Downpours often pollute North Carolina’s waterways when stormwater washes oil, gravel, pollen, and other debris off the pavement into nearby streams. One inch of rain on a one-acre parking lot can send 27,000 gallons of water gushing into storm drains. NC State researchers have developed practices for controlling such runoff and are helping craft state and local regulations to limit its impact in the future. As part of a larger research project, Drs. Devine and Baran used geographic information science techniques and technologies to measure changes in stormwater runoff between conventional and cluster developments in Brunswick County.  Read the complete article in RESULTS

Researchers Restore Lost WetlandsDr. Doug FrederickWetlands and streams, pieces of North Carolina’s natural landscape, have been lost over time as land across the state has been cultivated for farming, paved for transportation, or built into residential and commercial property. But NC State researchers are working to restore the natural order to some of these areas, improving wildlife habitats and water quality in the process. Where wetland destruction can't be avoided, wetland banking offers a viable option. Enter Dr. Doug Frederick, forester and wetland mitigation bank expert. Read the complete article in RESULTS

RESULTS: Research and Graduate Studies at North Carolina State University is published three times yearly by the Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research and Graduate Studies

Browse past issues of RESULTS here

FAA: Bird Strike Was Cause of RDU Flight's Emergency Landing

WRAL.com – August 10, 2009

 

"The initial investigation revealed that the engine on the right side of the aircraft ingested a large bird and was seriously damaged," FAA spokeswoman Kathleen Bergen said Monday. "The aircraft will remain at RDU until the engine is replaced." The engine will undergo a more detailed examination after it's removed from the aircraft, Bergen said.

Sunday's strike marks the fourth reported at RDU this year. Two other strikes caused no damage and one caused minimal damage. According to the FAA, there were six significant strikes at RDU from 1990 to 2007. RDU spokeswoman Mindy Hamlin said the airport uses several proactive strategies to help keep animals away from aircraft. That includes regular grounds keeping, making the area unattractive to wildlife and loud pyrotechnics to scare off birds spotted any time of day.

Hamlin said there is also constant communication among pilots, air traffic control and ground crews.
"So, if the air traffic control tower sees there are birds in the vicinity of the airport and the airfield, they will let us know, and we can go out an disperse them," she said. "The pilots, if they see birds near them or around the airfield, they will let the air traffic control tower know as well."

The FAA will also look at the airport's mitigation plan to see if there should be any changes to how it handles animals near aircraft, Hamlin said. The plan is already subject to an annual FAA review.

Bird-aircraft collisions are not unusual, but they are being more scrutinized since Charlotte-bound US Airways Flight 1549 ditched into the Hudson River in January after striking a flock of Canada geese after takeoff from New York's LaGuardia Airport. Both engines on that aircraft were knocked out and all 155 people aboard survived after the plane's pilot, Chesley "Sully" Sullenberger, safely guided landed it into the Hudson River. That incident led the FAA to release of its bird strike database. The report revealed that airplane collisions with birds have more than doubled at 13 major U.S. airports since 2000.

A team of researchers at North Carolina State University has also studied flying-bird strikes for more than a year in an effort to figure out the best way to manage the situation. "We want to know how often they cross runways, what time of day they do this," said Liz Rutledge, a PhD student at N.C. State. "(We're seeing) the geese stay within 3 to 5 miles of the airport, so we think its critical to look at these areas."  Rutledge said findings suggest airports could reduce the bird strike risk by moving retention ponds.

RDU is considering putting screens over its ponds to keep birds away.

 Read the article and view video on WRAL.com

Learn more about Liz Rutledge's research and those of others in NC State's Fisheries and Wildlife Sciences Program in "For the Birds" in the Winter 2008 CNR Magazine

An On-Course Education

 NC State University Web Feature – July 2009

by D'Lyn Ford, NC State News Services / photo by Roger W. Winstead, NC State Creative Services

The view from hole #3 at the Lonnie Poole Golf Course which will also serve as an outdoor classroom and "living lab" for NC State University students and faculty.

Ask golfers about NC State’s new Lonnie Poole Golf Course and they’ll share these stats: It’s an 18-hole, 7,358-yard, par 71 Arnold Palmer-designed course on Centennial Campus.

But faculty and students, including those who don’t play golf, also have designs on the golf course. They’re eager for it to grow into its role as a 250-acre outdoor classroom and living laboratory.

While the men’s and women’s golf teams practice at their long-awaited home course, more than 200 undergraduates in the turfgrass program will come here for field labs and about 20 graduate students will tend research projects. Professional Golf Management majors in one of only 20 PGA-accredited programs will gain real-world experience in the $76 billion business of golf.

NC State’s Friday Institute, a Centennial Campus neighbor, plans to bring science teachers and students to the Audubon-certified golf course to learn about wildlife management and environmental issues. And parks and recreation students may coax Centennial Middle School students into taking their first golf swings here.

Green Design

NC State faculty helped golf course designers transform kudzu-covered land into a championship course that fits into the natural environment. The course’s design and management are intended to be at the forefront of the move toward sustainability, says Tom Rufty, crop science professor and co-director of the Center for Turfgrass Environmental Research and Education.

“It is designed to require lower inputs of fertilizer, pesticides and water,” Rufty says. “We’ve added over 2,500 native and adapted plants. That helps establish a more sustainable system that has lower resource use and minimizes impacts on the surrounding environment.”

The bunkers and rough look different. Instead of pristine white, smooth-sided traps found on other courses, bunkers here have natural jagged edges and sand stained by erosion – normal with the Piedmont’s clay soils.

Errant shots fall into a low-maintenance mix of fine fescue and wild grasses. When fully grown in, the rough will need minimal care while accenting the course’s beauty and challenging golfers.

“You don’t want any part of the rough,” Nick Dillman, an NC State alum working at the course, tells a golfer who’s about to play his first round.

Dillman knows. To earn his degree in the Professional Golf Management program, he had to pass a PGA playing test and complete 16-months of co-op work at golf courses.

In his new job at Lonnie Poole, his duties include working with golfers and helping NC State students plan golf sessions for middle school students from Centennial Campus. In high school, Dillman realized how much he enjoyed golf and decided to parlay it into a career.

“I play where I work,” he says.

After his shift, he’ll probably squeeze in a round.

Going for the Green

Having a golf course will help NC State attract PGM students like Dillman as well as top collegiate players, says Robb Wade, head of the NC State’s eight-year-old program, which has 90 students.

“For the last year and a half, we’ve started taking students out to show them the progress on the golf course,” Wade says. “As good as the local courses were to us, it wasn’t the same as having one right on campus.”

While a love of golf brings PGM students to NC State, Wade encourages them to learn about the array of related careers.

“I don’t see our role in PGM as helping them get better at golf but better aware of the things they need to know to succeed in the business of golf,” Wade says.

PGM majors can pursue jobs as tournament coordinators, demo reps for high-tech golf equipment like handheld GPS units or marketers of golf apparel to the growing number of women taking up the sport. At a PGA show in Orlando this March, more than half of the million feet of floor space were devoted to apparel, most of it for women, Wade says.

“People used to venture out onto the links wearing plaid shorts, striped shirts and golf shoes with a flap on top. Now you have to have the proper clothing, sunglasses, gloves, hat and belt.”

Fueled by the appeal of players like Tiger Woods, the golf industry is looking for ways to attract new players. Some courses set up areas for beginning players, show movies on the clubhouse walls during family night, host nature hikes or handing out kid-friendly plastic golf clubs and tennis balls to elementary PE teachers.

NC State intern Sarah Hunt is working with golf’s next generation. Since May, she’s put 9,000 miles on her car, traveling with the Peggy Kirk Bell Junior Golf Tour and U.S. Kids tours of the Triad and the Triangle.

“I’ve loved every second,” says Hunt, a former junior golf competitor who working with young players. “The more experience you get, the more opportunities there are to advance in your career path.”

“Sarah’s phenomenal with kids,” Wade says. “The career prospects have shifted from 15 years ago when being a golf professional at a green grass facility was the primary career.”

Hometown Welcome

In its first few weeks of operation, the course with panoramic views of the Raleigh skyline has welcomed college golfers, alumni, retirees and family groups who’ve explored the links, honed their putting on the practice green and peppered the driving range with golf balls bearing red and white stripes.

On Friday, July 31, Arnold Palmer will preside over the invitation-only ribbon cutting for his only university course and give a private golf clinic, and on Aug. 15-16, the V Foundation will hold its Golf Classic for Cancer Research at Lonnie Poole Golf Course, a fitting host site for fans and friends of Jim Valvano.

The weekend tournament, which is open to the public on Sunday, Aug. 16, features celebrity golfers like NBA star Charles Barkley, 16-year-old prodigy Dakoda Dowd, recording artist Meat Loaf and ESPN SportsCenter host Stuart Scott. Admission is $5, and the gates open at 8:30 a.m. with a 9:30 shotgun start.

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