Merit Badge University Creates Learning Environment for Scouts and CNR Volunteers

hands-on fisheries excercise

Graduate student leads Scout in hands-on exercise to earn Fisheries & Wildlife Management merit badge.

Contributors: Aletta Davis and Christi Standley

It was a cold and windy day, rain threatened on the horizon, but about 150 hardy Boy Scouts were found roaming throughout NC State University’s campus and properties, learning and working hard to earn merit badges in science-based subjects. Held March 26 this year, NCSU Merit Badge University is a one-day event hosted by several colleges and departments for local Boy Scouts.

The College of Natural Resources provided the curriculum and resources for a great group of dedicated Boy Scouts to earn their choice of five badges: Fisheries & Wildlife Management, Environmental Science, Pulp & Paper, Forestry, and Soil & Water Conservation.  To offer this fabulous experience, numerous faculty, staff, and students (undergraduate and graduate) joined together to plan and lead the Scouts through a variety of requirements needed for each of these badges. For instance, fourteen NCSU faculty, staff and students, along with several Boy Scout volunteers, served as instructors and guides at Schenck Forest, the site of the Forestry and Soil & Water Conservation merit badge activities.

Goldfarb leads group

Forestry and Environmental Resources Department Head, Barry Goldfarb, gathers the Scouts before their next exercise.

Spending the day teaching the Boy Scouts about these fields of interest was rewarding for all involved, especially having the opportunity to observe intelligent, curious scouts who are full of energy and interested in learning new things.  Seeing Scouts who were ‘repeat attenders’ this year is a strong indication of the success of Merit Badge University.  Aletta Davis, graduate student and lab manager in the college, recalled her experience helping with this event over the past two years, saying, “I’m always amazed at the Scouts’ willingness to participate in hands-on learning exercises while working together to help each other earn these badges. I’ve learned a lot from working with the Boy Scouts and, I hope, in turn, they’ve learned a little bit about my field of interest, soils. ”

soil demonstration

Aletta Davis, center, leading the Scouts through a demonstration about soil properties.

A special thanks to Tiffany McLean, CNR Director of Enrollment Management, for organizing CNR’s contribution to NCSU Merit Badge University, as she did a fabulous job of planning and organizing this event in every detailed way, even including tracking down a freezer of frozen fish stomachs!

Tools and Technology Aid the North Carolina Coast

 RESULTS magazine cover - winter 2011The research of College of Natural Resources professors Dave Tilotta, Stacy Nelson and Tom Colson along with graduate students Tyler Strayhorn and Brett Harris are featured in “The North Carolina Coast,”  the Winter 2011 issue of  Results – the Research and Innovation Magazine at North Carolina State University.  

Here are two examples of how we’re improving the lives of the people, plants and animals who populate our coast. 

Tools Needed to Bounce Back after the Storm  

Coastal storms have raked North Carolina, with intense winds demolishing buildings and ripping apart infrastructure. They also have swamped the state, with torrential rains forcing residents to flee for higher ground and leaving homes uninhabitable.  NC State researchers are studying ways to design coastal communities—through planning and construction—to be more resilient in future storms.
Dr. Dave Tilotta (left) and Tyler Strayhorn, an M.S. candidate in Forest Biomaterials, use flood-simulation tanks to test building material resiliency to river water and sea water.

Dr. Dave Tilotta (left) and Tyler Strayhorn, an M.S. candidate in Forest Biomaterials, use flood-simulation tanks to test building material resiliency to river water and sea water.

                                                                                                                                     Dr. Dave Tilotta is trying to find ways to make building materials more storm-proof. An associate professor and extension specialist in the Department of Forest Biomaterials, Tilotta is NC State’s point man for the DHS’ Resilient Home Program. The effort came about after Hurricane Katrina, when officials realized there was no single place for homeowners whose houses had been damaged in a natural disaster to seek information.

Tilotta’s team worked with program members at Savannah River National Laboratory, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, and Clemson University to create YouTube videos and other means to disseminate information on issues like mold mitigation and ways to retrofit homes. They also developed performance-based guidelines to encourage construction of buildings to better withstand high winds. 

“The best way for a community to recover from a natural disaster is to get people back into their homes
as quickly as possible.”
 

The Resilient Home Program is now ramping up research efforts, such as determining how resistant building materials are to floodwaters. “FEMA provides guidance on when materials should be considered too damaged for use, but there’s no science behind them,” Tilotta says.  His team dunks flooring into specially built flood-simulation tanks in Hodges Laboratory that contain river water or saltwater. After soaking the boards for up to a couple of weeks and then drying them out, they put the materials through a battery of tests to see how well they meet performance standards like weight-bearing capacity.

Eventually, Tilotta says, they will test wall studs and other materials as well. “The best way for a community to recover from a natural disaster is to get people back into their homes as quickly as possible,” he says. “Our research and education efforts are designed with that goal in mind.”   

Eye in Sky Can See Underwater Greenery

Dr. Stacy Nelson and Brett Hartis, a Ph.D. candidate in Forestry and Environmental Resources, examine underwater vegetation in the Currituck Sound.

Dr. Stacy Nelson and Brett Hartis, a Ph.D. candidate in Forestry and Environmental Resources, examine underwater vegetation in the Currituck Sound.

 

Under a searing summer sun, an NC State research team takes a small boat out onto Currituck Sound and drops some lines in the water. This is no ordinary fishing expedition, however. The group is reeling in samples of plants growing in the sediment a few feet below the surface so they can correlate their findings with images snapped by a satellite soaring more than 275 miles over their heads. 

Determining the location and variety of vegetation submerged in a body of water has always been a labor-intensive process. It’s also one with the potential for inaccuracy, as researchers pull samples from various points and then extrapolate their findings over a wider area. The North Carolina Department of Transportation (NCDOT) asked Dr. Stacy Nelson, associate professor in the Department of Forestry and Environmental Resources, to find an easier and more reliable way to inventory underwater plants.

Submerged vegetation often presents planning problems for NCDOT engineers on projects that cross water. They must either avoid areas teeming with plants because those spots often are also teeming with fish or mitigate the construction damage by replanting elsewhere.  “If you don’t have an accurate inventory of what’s there,” Nelson says, “you don’t know where to avoid and what to mitigate.” 

Nelson, who works in the College of Natural Resources’ (CNR) Center for Earth Observation, believes high-resolution satellite images can be used to pinpoint submerged vegetation. He says he had good results using satellite photos to map lakes in Michigan a few years back, and now he is tapping into more detailed photos from a commercial satellite called Quickbird to develop a mathematical model for predicting what plants are where underwater. The model also will include data on water quality and the “reflective signature” of various plants. 

Submerged vegetation often presents planning problems for NCDOT engineers
on projects that cross water.

Getting the signature for each species is where the boat trips on Currituck Sound come in. “Water either scatters or absorbs the reflective energy the satellite is trying to capture, so there’s little left to develop a signature,” Nelson says. Together with Dr. Tom Colson, a geographic information systems expert in CNR, and two graduate students, he had to conduct a manual inventory so they could match their findings to the Quickbird photos. They collected samples at 276 points over 270 square miles three times during the summer as vegetation changed, noting the global-positioning satellite coordinates of each point so they would sample the exact spots each time. “If we can use the model to preserve healthy plant communities,” Nelson says, “we can boost the underwater ecology along our coast.” 

Results: Research and Innovation at North Carolina State University is published three times yearly by the Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research and Innovation. 

Editor – Matthew Burns
Photography: Roger Winstead

Arbor Day Celebration Drew a Large Crowd and was Fun for All

learning how to care for plants

Triangle Chapter of the Society of American Foresters (SAF) donated native plants and held a plant adoption station for youth. SAF member Kelley McCarter explains how to plant and care for this young plant.

This year’s North Carolina Arbor Day Celebration was a tremendous success, and the State Farmers Market in Raleigh proved to be an ideal location for the event. The warm weather and festive mood created a wonderful backdrop for hundreds of adults and youth to interact with resource professionals, faculty, and students and learn about the importance of trees and forests and how they improve the quality of our lives.

See News 14 Carolina’s video coverage: “Arbor Day plants a seed for new careers”

Congratulations and thanks to all of the NC Arbor Day Celebration exhibitors, supporters and participants who made the event possible and such fun!

Many thanks to the following:

Seedling giveaway

During the five-hour free event, members of the Triangle and NC State Student Chapters of SAF distributed 1000 redbud seedlings and answered the public’s questions on a variety of forest-related topics.

Triangle Chapter of SAF
Sustainable Forestry Initiative
Forest History Society
NC Forestry Association
NC Division of Forest Resources
NC Division of Forest Resources – Urban & Community Forestry
City of Raleigh – Urban Forestry
NeighborWoods Program
NCSU College of Natural Resources – Department of Forestry and Environmental Resources

NCSU College of Natural Resources – Department of Forest Biomaterials
NCSU Extension Forestry
Gregory Poole Equipment Company
NC Prescribed Fire Council

Learn more at Celebrate North Carolina’s Arbor Day at the State Farmers Market and go.ncsu.edu/arborday2011

Zobel – Forest Genetics Pioneer Passes

Dr Bruce Zobel

Dr Zobel came into the office regularly for almost 30 years following his official retirement as Professor of Forestry at NC State.

In Memoriam

Dr. Bruce J. Zobel, NC State professor emeritus and pioneer in the field of forest genetics, died February 5 2011 at his home in Raleigh. He was 90.

Zobel’s connection with NC State lasted 55 years.  It began with his move to Raleigh in 1957 to lead the Cooperative Tree Improvement Program.  He remained active following his first retirement from that position in 1979, founding the Camcore program in gene conservation and forest genetics.
He continued to teach undergraduate and graduate classes and mentor graduate students until 2001.  In 2004, Zobel received the Alexander Quarles Holladay Medal for career achievements and contributions to the university.

A native of California, Zobel earned a forestry degree from the University of California, Berkeley in 1943 and took a job as a logging engineer in redwood forests until he was drafted the following year. The Marine served in California, Virginia and North Carolina, where he was appointed forestry officer at Camp Lejeune near Jacksonville, NC.

Dr. Bruce Zobel - the early years

Zobel in the treetops during the genesis of the field of tree improvement

After his military service, Zobel returned to Berkeley to earn master’s and doctoral degrees in forestry. He oversaw a new program in forest genetics at Texas A&M University until 1956. The following year he joined NC State.

Zobel, who served as the E.F. Conger Distinguished Professor of Forestry, received the O. Max Gardner award, the UNC Board of Governors’ highest faculty honor, in 1972 for outstanding contributions to the welfare of humankind.

Bruce Zobel accepts the TAPPI Gold Medal in 1975

Dr. Zobel accepts the TAPPI Gold Medal in 1975

The late Dr. Bruce J. Zobel accepts Nc State University's presigious Holladay Medal

In 2004, Zobel received the Alexander Quarles Holladay Medal for career achievements and contributions to the university.

Recognized as an authority on genetic improvement and variation of wood properties, Zobel earned international recognition in 1975 as the first forester to be awarded the TAPPI Gold Medal for outstanding contributions to the technical progress of the pulp and paper industry.

Zobel did consulting work around the world, authored six books and mentored more than 100 graduate students, many of whom hold leadership positions with universities, government and industry. In 1998, he and his wife created the Bruce and Barbara Zobel Endowment for International Forestry to allow students to gain firsthand experience with forestry production around the world.  In 2004, he received the Alexander Quarles Holladay Medal.

Donations in his memory may be made to Avent Ferry United Methodist Chiurch in Raleigh, North Carolina, the Bruce and Barbara Zobel Scholarship Fund in care of Campus Box 8010 NC State University 27695 or a charity of your choice.

College Honors Distinguished Alumnus

Ernie Alexander, 2010 Distinguished Alumnus Winner, accepts award from NC State Natural Resources Dean Robert Brown

Dr. Alexander and Dean Brown at the NC State "Evening With the Stars" Gala - January 2011

NEWS RELEASE

The College of Natural Resources at North Carolina State University is pleased to announce the selection of our 2010 Distinguished Alumnus -Dr. Ernie Alexander.

 Dr. Alexander ’67, ’72, combined an undergraduate degree in pulp and paper technology with a PhD in chemical engineering to build a successful career in the forest products industry. After completing his doctorate, Dr. Alexander joined Westvaco, a leading paper, packaging and specialty chemicals corporation, as a research engineer.  After seven years, he was transferred to Covington Mill as supervisor of the newly formed paper process group. Dr. Alexander spent 23 years at Covington Mill, taking on positions of increasing responsibility, including technical director, pulp mill superintendent and pulping expansion manager.

 After the merger of Westvaco and Mead Corporation in 2002, Dr. Alexander joined the company’s corporate engineering department, which was relocated to NC State’s Centennial Campus in 2006.

There, he led a team of production superintendents from all MeadWestvaco Mills to handle property conservation and operational improvements. Specifically, Dr. Alexander supervised major capital improvement projects at plants in Texas and South Carolina.

 Dr. Alexander retired in 2009 and launched his own consulting firm to provide valuable advice to forest products companies, including his former employer, MeadWestvaco.

 Throughout his career, Dr. Alexander has been a strong supporter of the NC State College of Natural Resources.  Following his retirement from MeadWestvaco he became a volunteer employee in the College’s development office assisting with industry and foundation relations, student mentoring and fundraising.

 Understanding the importance of donors to the university’s future, Dr. Alexander and his wife Beverly established the Ernie and Beverly Alexander Endowed Scholarship in Paper Science and Engineering at NC State. 

 Dr. Alexander accepted the distinguished alumnus honor on January 29, 2011 at the NC State University Alumni Association’s “Evening of Stars” Gala in Raleigh.  He lives in Cary, NC with his wife, Beverly.

See a complete list of previous honorees

For more information contact Tilla Fearn at  (919) 513-4644 or tilla_fearn@ncsu.edu