Jetton honored by Southern Forest Insect Work Conference

Robert Jetton, Research Assistant Professor in the Department of Forestry & Environmental Resources and a Project Leader in Camcore, is the 2009 recipient of the Roger F. Anderson Memorial Outstanding Graduate Student Award sponsored by the Southern Forest Insect Work Conference.
Dr. Robert Jetton
Robert has a B.S. in Biology from Furman University and a M.S. in Forestry with an Entomology co-major from NC State University. He received his Ph.D. in Entomology with a Forestry co-major from NC State in December 2008. The award is for his doctoral research with Fred Hain, Professor in the Department of Entomology, which he completed as a part-time student while on staff at Camcore.

Camcore is a non-profit, international program that strives for the conservation and domestication of forest genetic resources for sustainable economic, ecological, and social benefits. Robert serves as the Project Leader for gene conservation and research programs with Eastern and Carolina hemlock and Table Mountain Pine. He explains, "All three species are native to the southeastern United States and are endangered in their native range."

Among Robert's many accomplishments are six refereed publications (four as senior author), 25 oral and poster presentations at national and regional scientific conferences, and three invited presentations/guest lectures. He will receive a plaque and check for $250.00 in recognition of this impressive achievement in forest entomology.

Partnership with Habitat for Humanity Lays Solid Foundation for New Sustainable Wood Products Course

NC State students salvage wood from home deconstructionWorking with Habitat for Humanity deconstructing homes is just the first step for students in a new interdisciplinary course offered this Fall by the Department of Wood and Paper Science at NC State. The main objective of WPS491/"Wood as A Sustainable Material" is to introduce the ideas and concepts of sustainability as it relates to wood and wood products manufacturing, including using waste wood for value added products and energy.

As part of their coursework the students tour historic homes and green buildings and collaborate with Habitat for Humanity to deconstruct homes. The deconstructed wood (lumber) is brought to the Hodges Wood Products Lab at NC State where the students develop value-added products, like mouldings, from the wood. Once produced to Habitat's specifications, the value-added projects will be used on Habitat homes under construction. 

NC State wood products students salvage roofing boards from a home being deconstructed by Habitat for HumanityAccording to course professor Sudipta Dasmohapatra, the students will gain a broad perspective of sustainability and green principles; become familar with various applications of wood as a sustainable and renewable material; learn about wood construction and deconstruction concepts like moisture retention, drying, nailing and finishing; and develop an understanding of life cycle analysis and certification – all while providing a service to the community.

College of Natural Resources to Host C.H.A.N.G.E. – 4th Annual Diversity Summit

NEWS RELEASE:  September 23, 2009

What:  C.H.A.N.G.E. 4th Annual Diversity Summit Webinar
When:  October 13-15, 2009 from 10:30am – 2:00pm daily
Where: Webinar originates from the NC State African American Cultural Center at NC State University in Raleigh, North Carolina

Many companies and organizations in natural resources have embraced their diversity challenges, developing programs focused on recruiting underrepresented populations. But important though it is, recruiting is only the first step. Once they join your organization, how do you retain this new talent?

At the "Cultivating Higher Achievement in Generational Engagement" Webinar, the NC State Community for Diversity in Natural Resources will continue the discussion about understanding diversity as it relates to different identity groups as part of the 4th Annual Diversity Summit. The goal of this conference is to provide information about how to increase and improve diversity efforts in all areas of natural resources.

This year the summit will be delivered as a webinar.  Embracing this new delivery method has the added benefit of allowing more people to participate. For more information about the agenda, speakers and registration – visit the Webinar website.

Summit sponsors are Weyerhaeuser and the NC State College of Natural Resources

Green Clean: Researchers Determining Natural Ways To Clean Contaminated Soil

NEWS RELEASE

Media Contacts:
Dr. Elizabeth Nichols, 919/513-4832
Caroline Barnhill, News Services, 919/515-6251

phytoremediation siteResearchers at North Carolina State University are working to demonstrate that trees can be used to degrade or capture fuels that leak into soil and ground water. Through a process called phytoremediation – literally a green technology – plants and trees remove pollutants from the environment or render them harmless.

Through a partnership with state and federal government agencies, the military and industry, Dr. Elizabeth Nichols, environmental technology professor in NC State's Department of Forestry and Environmental Resources, and her team are using phytoremediation to clean up a contaminated site in Elizabeth City, N.C.

Phytoremediation uses plants to absorb heavy metals from the soil into their roots. The process is an attractive alternative to the standard clean-up methods currently used, which are very expensive and energy intensive. At appropriate sites, phytoremediation can be a cost-effective and sustainable technology, Nichols says.

The Coast Guard site was planted with a mixture of fast-growing trees such as hybrid poplars and willows to prevent residual fuel waste from entering the Pasquotank River by ground water discharge. About 3,000 trees were planted on the five-acre site, which stored aircraft fuel for the Coast Guard base from 1942 until 1991. Fuels had been released into the soil and ground water over time.  Efforts to recover easily extractable fuel using a free product recovery system – also called oil skimmers – had stalled so other remedial options were considered before choosing phytoremediation.

We knew that tree growth would be difficult on portions of the site due to the levels of fuels in the soil and ground water, but, overall, we thought the trees could  keep this contamination from moving toward the river by slowing ground water flow, Nichols said. Trees need water for photosynthesis so they absorb water from the ground; that process can slow the amount of ground water flowing toward the river.

In the process of absorbing water from the ground, trees can take up fuel contaminants. Some contaminants will be degraded by trees during this process while others will be released into the air by tree leaves and stems. We wanted to demonstrate that the trees would first slow the movement of fuel toward the river, Nichols said.

Trees can also increase the abundance and diversity of soil microorganisms around their roots. Some of these soil microorganisms will degrade the fuel still remaining in the ground. This can be a slower process, but we also want to show that trees will remove the remaining fuel footprint over time, Nichols continued.

Initially, 500 hybrid poplar and willow trees were planted in 2006.  Another 2,500 trees were planted in 2007. Our initial results are very encouraging, and amounts of fuel in the ground have decreased much faster than anticipated, Nichols said, but there is still much to learn about how trees can impact residual, weathered fuels over time. There are two areas on the site where trees do not do well, but, overall, tree growth and survival are impressive. The Coast Guard has recognized the value of phytoremediation from this study, and has established two additional phytoremediation systems at different locations on base. [see photos below of plantings over time]

The project received a $240,584 grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the N.C. Department of Environment and Natural Resourcess (NCDENR) Division of Water Quality 319 program, and an additional $15,000 grant from British Petroleum North America to establish the demonstration site. Nichols worked with Brad Atkinson (NCDENR), Dr. James Landmeyer (U.S. Geological Survey), J.P. Messier (U.S. Coast Guard), and Rachel Cook, a graduate student at NC State, to design and implement the phyto-demonstration site. NC State was recently awarded an additional EPA/NCDENR 319 grant to continue monitoring the site for tree growth and fuel reduction, tree toxicity to fuels, changes to ground water levels and flow, and how fuel contamination is actually removed by trees. 

– barnhill –

research site in 2007
research site in 2008
research site in 2009
Progression of plantings on phytoremediation site from 2007 to 2009.

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.