A Good Start to the Fall Semester

After filling up on BBQ and the fixings, first-year Forestry and Environmental Resources undergraduate students, friends and family joined current students, staff and faculty in conversation and cake!

Faculty and staff in the Department of Forestry and Environmental Resources were anxious to start the Fall 2012 Semester with a little learning and light-hearted fun.

First-year undergraduate students, together with their friends and family joined FER and CNR faculty, staff and current students for the FER Welcome Picnic at Schenck Forest on Saturday, August 11.

Just in case the cake wasn’t enough, children at the picnic were ready and willing to create mud pies. The rain shower helped create the right conditions!

Incoming freshmen and transfer students had the opportunity to introduce themselves and learn a little about each other, student clubs, and all of the extra-curricular activities awaiting their participation.  A brief rain shower did not interfere with the delicious meal or dampen the spirits of the more than one hundred gathered there. “This is the first time since 1999 that it has rained during the Welcome Picnic,” observed Sydna Willis, FER student services specialist and organizer of the picnic, “Lucky 13, I guess!”  But if anything, showers only added to the fun had by the youngest of the group.

Professor and head of the department, Barry Goldfarb, joked with the group, welcomed the new students, and led the introductions, which included Dean Robert Brown and many faculty and current students.

Faculty, professionals, and students judged posters. Student-judges were to use the 3×3 rule: can the poster be understood in 3 minutes from 3 feet away.

On Monday, August 16, the Graduate Associations of both Forestry and Environmental Resources and Marine, Earth, and Atmospheric Sciences jointly held the 2012 Graduate Student Symposium. This event provided new and returning graduate students of both departments the opportunity to present their own research, while learning from oral and poster presentations about the interdisciplinary and cutting-edge research being conducted by NC State University masters and doctoral students.  The symposium fosters inter- and intra-departmental interaction and awareness of research across disciplines.

Betsy Bennett, Director of the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences, was the keynote speaker, providing a truly engaging talk about the importance of science education and public outreach.  Dr. Bennett invited the full house audience to become involved with the Museum through its many programs, workshops, science talks, and volunteer opportunities.  “Many of our past and currents students have become involved with the Museum,” stated FER graduate program coordinator Sarah Slover, “and I think many more will, after learning the different ways that they can contribute their time and knowledge.”

There were many opportunities for faculty and students to catch up with each other after summer and meet new friends and colleagues.

In addition to learning about the great people and opportunities that are all part of the department, college, university, and local communities, events such as the Undergraduate Welcome Picnic and Graduate Research Symposium, create the chance to meet and network with fellow students, staff and faculty.  They offer the base from which community engagement and lifelong friendships will be built.

MEAS/FER Graduate Research Symposium organizers created fun awards for the top winners in the categories of oral and poster presentations. Here, Sarah Fritts, doctoral student in FER holds the impressive “Pinecone Award” for Best PhD Oral Presentation.

 

 

 

Top presenters from the 2012 MEAS and FER Graduate Research Symposium:

Best PhD poster:

  • Winner: Praju Kiliyanpilakkil  (MEAS)
  • 2nd: Nathon Lyons (MEAS)
  • 3rd: Tim Wright (MEAS)
Best PhD talk:

  • Winner: Sarah Fritts (Fish & Wildlife)
  • 2nd place: Steve Grodsky (Fish & Wildlife)
  • 3rd place: Yizhen Li (MEAS)
Best MS poster:

  • Winner: Lindsay Garner (Fish & Wildlife)
  • 2nd place: Sander Denham (Forestry)
  • 3rd place: Margret Frey (MEAS)
Best MS talk:

  • Winner: Keith Sherburn (MEAS)
  • 2nd place: Hilary Cole (Natural Resources)
  • 3rd place: Matt Wilbanks (MEAS)

Still time to sign up for the final two Woodland Steward Series Workshops in Asheville, NC

August 1, 2012 – North Carolina State University’s Forestry & Environmental Outreach Program is co-sponsoring a series of four workshops for private forest landowners called the Woodland Steward Series: Mountains Program. From its inception in 2003, which marked the official re-opening of the Biltmore Forest School, the series has helped promote a healthy environment by educating private landowners about land management.

Attendees at the Cradle of ForestryThe first two workshops were very successful. The final two will occur August 15th – August 17th at Bent Creek Experimental Forest, Asheville, NC, and the Cradle of Forestry, Brevard, NC.  They will be led by natural resource and land management specialists, and will include both hands-on activities in the field and instruction in the classroom.

For more information or to register online visit: www.ncsu-feop.org/woodlandstewards. Please contact Addie Thornton, Course Coordinator, with any questions or concerns at: addie_thornton@ncsu.edu or 919-515-9563.

More details:

Forest Engineering Professionals to Meet in Historic New Bern, NC

The Council on Forest Engineering (COFE) will hold its 35th annual meeting September 10-12, 2012 in New Bern, North Carolina at the Doubletree Riverfront Hotel. The theme of the meeting is “Engineering New Solutions for Energy Supply and Demand”. The local host of the meeting is North Carolina State University’s Department of Forestry and Environmental Resources.

The annual meeting features oral and poster presentations, and a local field tour; COFE logoall pertaining to research/technology of forest engineering. The meeting serves as a showcase for innovation, and is a fertile atmosphere for problem-solving and networking. Online registration and payment are available. See the meeting web site for full details: http://www.ncsu-feop.org/COFE/.

COFE is an international organization with the goal of fostering the development of forest engineering in industry, government, and in university teaching, research, and extension programs to promote the best methods of managing and operating forests; to serve the forestry profession on matters of policy in the area of forest engineering; and to disseminate technical information on forest engineering subjects. For more information about COFE, visit: http://www.cofe.org/

Study Is More About The Bees Than The Trees

Syrphid fly feeding on False Dandelion

Syrphid fly feeding on False Dandelion
Photo from Watauga County CES

Christmas tree growers might not realize that the diverse mixes of groundcovers growing underneath their trees provide important habitat for pollinators.  Pollinators which are responsible for an estimated 75% of the average food products that we eat each and every day!

Dr. Jill Sidebottom, with NC State University’s Christmas Tree Program, and county agents are working on a pollinator study specifically looking at tree farms in Watauga, Ashe, Allegheny, Avery and Mitchell counties.

The study will follow these farms for an entire year, taking data on the mix of specific plants growing under the trees, what’s flowering and when, and what types of pollinators and other insects are observed. This study is unique in that the majority of the fieldwork is not actually focused on the Christmas trees… but rather what’s growing underneath them! 

The best practices specific to the Christmas tree industry on pollinator protection and conservation which result from the study will help tree growers and beekeepers collaborate to sustain pollinators.

Adapted from Christmas Tree Pollinator Study, Watuga County Cooperative Extension Blog 7/9/2012

Renee Strnad Honored as Tarheel of the Week

Renee Strand, Extension Forestry Associate at NC State University

Photo by Corey Lowenstein – clowenst@newsobserver.com

Renee Strand, NC Project Learning Tree Coordinator and an environmental educator with Extension Forestry at NC State University, has been honored as Tarheel of the Week by North Carolina’s largest daily newspaper, the News and Observer.  Over her career, Strnad has evolved a part-time job as an environmental education coordinator into a position as a highly respected and well-known leader in environmental education policy and advocacy in North Carolina. Strnad has a passion for making sure children are exposed to nature and aware of its limited resources.

According to Lisa Tolley, program manager with the state office of environmental education and public affairs, “She is one of the strongest advocates for environmental education in the state.  She’s reached a lot of people, and her passion for her work is contagious.”

Read the complete article in the News and Observer>>