Summer 2017 Job: Lead Summer trips for Overland, Tuesday 3.7 @ 7PM

Employer Info Session: Overland Summers

March 7, 2017 | 7:00 PM – 8:00 PM | Moulton Union, Lancaster Lounge

Overland is hiring exceptional college students to lead biking, hiking, language, service, writing and field studies programs – both domestic and abroad – for students ages 11 to 19. Small groups, carefully crafted programs and inspiring leadership have been at the heart of what we do for the past 30 years. Overland staff spend 10 days training and 6 weeks leading or supporting programs.

Kim Nault ’16 and Nora Gunning present on summer leadership opportunities.

Off Campus Event: Maine Sustainability and Water Conference (3/30)

The 2017 Maine Sustainability & Water Conference is scheduled for Thursday, March 30, 2017 at the Augusta Civic Center. The conference will include two concurrent sessions, a student poster session and a keynote talk. Potential concurrent sessions include the following topics: Materials Management, Drought, Maine’s Changing Foodscape, Ocean and Coastal Acidification, Shoreland Zoning, Green-Gray Infrastructure. The conference keynote speaker is Aram Calhoun, a professor of wetlands ecology from UMaine. Aram will speak about her research that uses local vernal pool conservation as a model to help communities find ways to balance economic development with natural resource conservation on private land.

For more information, visit http://umaine.edu/mitchellcenter/2017-conference/

Off Campus Event: Global Food Solutions Conference

Lead your school to the 2017 Global Food Solutions Conference, all-expenses-paid!

It’s simple. Students will receive funding and toolkits to host a 90-minute event addressing interconnected issues like food production, climate change and the need to feed a growing world. The winning solution from the event will be entered into the Food Solutions Challenge for a chance to win $5,000!

To apply, visit http://www2.netimpact.org/e/200062/food-solutions-challenge-2017/8c4d4/30757415

To learn more about the Food Solutions Challenge and how you can get involved, email [email protected].

Volunteers Needed: Feathers over Freeport seeking volunteers (4/29, 4/30)

Feathers over Freeport is a program put on by Wolfe’s Neck Wood State Park in Freeport.  The program is aimed at providing and highlighting birding opportunities in the greater Freeport area to the public

They are seeking volunteers to help run the event. Please contact Zeb at (207) 865-4465 if you are interested. Visit http://www.maine.gov/dacf/parks/discover_history_explore_nature/activities/feathers_over_freeport.shtml for more information.

On Campus Event: From soft-shell clams to soft-shell crabs: Two practical solutions for adapting to a warming Gulf of Maine (2/14)

SAVE THE DATE!
“From soft-shell clams to soft-shell crabs: Two practical solutions for adapting to a warming Gulf of Maine”             

Aerial view of the first soft shell clam farm, Heal Eddy, Georgetown, ME Photo credit: John Hagan

Aerial view of the first soft shell clam farm, Heal Eddy, Georgetown, ME
Photo credit: John Hagan

                     
Tuesday, February 14 7:00 pm
315 Searles Hall

The Gulf of Maine is warming faster than 99% of the
world’s oceans. The ecosystem is being disrupted,
as are the livelihoods of fishermen along the coast.
While there is hope in the Paris Climate Accord for slowing climate change in the twenty-first century, the key for Maine fishermen is adaptation – developing ways to survive and thrive on the ecosystem that is already here, regardless of Paris. Join John Hagan and Marissa McMahan for an eminently practical view of how to navigate the brave new climate world facing Maine fisheries.

John M. Hagan Ph.D. is president of Manomet, a non-profit dedicated to making the world measurably more sustainable through the application of science. He has over thirty years of experience as a field ecologist, and has studied and published on freshwater invertebrates (bivalves), birds, reptiles, herbaceous and woody plants, and lichens and mosses. Recently, his research has focused on helping build diversified fisheries in Maine, especially soft-shell clams, given the rapidly-warming Gulf of Maine.
Marissa McMahan is currently a doctoral candidate in the ecology, evolution and marine biology program at Northeastern University, and is scheduled to graduate in August 2017. Her research focuses on ecology and fisheries in the Gulf of Maine, including published work on the American lobster and Atlantic cod, as well as extensive research on the northern range expansion of black sea bass. She has conducted field and laboratory experiments to understand population dynamics of crustaceans, such as growth, movement, behavior, distribution, and abundance. She also has an extensive background in commercial fisheries, having grown up in a commercial fishing family in mid-coast Maine, and worked as a commercial fisher for many years. She began investigating the potential for a soft-shell green crab industry in Maine in 2016, and established a network of collaborators spanning academia, industry, marketing, activism and journalism.
This event is open to the public free of charge, and co-sponsored by the Biology Department, the Environmental Studies Program, the Coastal Studies Center, and the Brunswick Community Earth Care Team.

Off-Campus Event/Opportunity: C2C Fellows Network, Bard Center for Environmental Policy

C2C Fellows Network, Bard Center for Environmental Policy
Gain the Knowledge to Change the Future

The C2C Fellows Network at the Bard Center for Environmental Policy is a national program for undergraduates and recent graduates aspiring to leadership work in sustainable politics, NGOs and business. C2C’s intensive skills-based weekend workshops include young people from across the country.

Led by Dr. Eban Goodstein, Director of Bard’s Center for Environmental Policy, C2C trainings focus on key leadership skills: vision, courage, developing your network, telling your story, and raising funds.

Graduates of the workshops join a national network with access to continuing educational and professional opportunities, including dedicated scholarships to attend Bard’s Graduate Programs in Sustainability: Masters of Science degrees in Environmental Policy and Climate Science and Policy and the Bard MBA in Sustainability.

C2C Fellows are leaders whose vision is to make a difference soon. Our mission is to accelerate their life’s work.

APPLY NOW

Details:

  • Registration fee of $30 covers lodging and food. Sample agenda here.
  • Conference begins at 4PMFriday 3/2 and ends on 12 noon Sunday 3/4. (see the Draft agenda here)
  • Bard College is 90 miles north of New York City, and is easily accessible by Amtrak from Penn Station in NYC.
  • Questions? Please contact Megan Lynch, [email protected]

Canada’s National Parks are Free in 2017- Get you pass

Following the spectacular Centennial year of the National Park Service in the United States, Canada is celebrating its 150th Birthday by making all of its national parks completely free!

Banff National Park | Photo: James Wheeler/CC by 2.0That’s right, our neighbors to the north have a collection of natural wonders that rival any the world over, and are letting you see them for free for the entire year. You can even have a free park pass delivered to you by Parks Canada, the agency that oversees the countries national parks and historical sites.

Click here to get your free Canada National Parks pass for 2017!

Jasper National Park | Photo: Scott Meis/CC by 2.0
Jasper National Park | Photo: Scott Meis/CC by 2.0

Canada’s offering of national parks is a welcoming contrast to those in the United States, with many of these parks located in remote northern areas, some require more than just packing up the station wagon and hitting the road, but for those that are looking to get the auto-tour experience, they have that too.

Prince Edward Island National Park | Photo: Doug Kerr/CC by 2.0
Prince Edward Island National Park | Photo: Doug Kerr/CC by 2.0

Parks like Banff National Park and Jasper National Park in Alberta provide stunning vistas in the Canadian Rockies. In the northeast, Fundy National Park, Prince Edward Island National Park, and Kejimkujik National Park and National Historic Site can be reached by car when crossing the border from Maine into Canada; even Cape Breton National Park is accessible, if you’re not afraid of a serious road trip.

On the west coast, Pacific Rim National Park and Nahanni National Park Reserve of Canada give contrasting tastes of the Canadian Pacific region and the Yukon Territory.

Off Campus Event: 2017 Maine Sustainability & Water Conference- Oral Abstracts Due 1/30

2017 Maine Sustainability & Water Conference

Thursday, March 30, 2017
Augusta Civic Center, Augusta, ME

Call for Abstracts

Oral Abstracts

Oral abstracts must fit within the guidelines of one of the session topics outlined on the concurrent sessions page. Notification of acceptance of oral abstracts for presentation will take place no later than Monday, January 30, 2016.

The submission deadline for oral abstracts is Friday, January 20, 2017.

Guidelines for Oral Abstracts

  • Indicate which session the abstract is being submitted to.
  • Indicate that this is an oral presentation.
  • Provide a title that accurately summarizes the subject of the presentation.
  • Indicate names and affiliations of all authors (include address, phone, and e-mail).
  • Bold and underline the name of the presenting author.
  • If primary author is a student, indicate “student” after name.
  • Provide an abstract not to exceed 250 words.
  • Abstract must state the purpose, significant results, and main conclusion of work.
  • Abstract should be single-spaced using 12-point Times Roman. Abstracts should be submitted as a Microsoft Word document or as an rtf file.

Please submit abstracts as an email attachment to [email protected].

Poster Abstracts

The submission deadline for poster abstracts is Thursday, March 9, 2017. Notification of acceptance of poster abstracts for presentation will take place no later than Monday, March 13, 2017.

Posters invited for display will address one or more aspects of the following:

  • Water quality/quantity. These may include chemical, biological, hydrological, and geochemical aspects of surface and ground waters, and their policy and economic implications.
  • Sustainability. These may include implementation and evaluation of policies and practices that promote economic development while protecting ecosystem health and fostering community well-being.

For 2017, the juried poster competition will include three judging categories: graduate, undergraduate and high-school.

Non-student poster presentations based on appropriate research findings are also accepted for display. Please note that we will not accept posters that are considered advertising. Organizations that wish to advertise should register as exhibitors.

Guidelines for Poster Abstracts

  • Indicate that this is a poster presentation.
  • Indicate judging category: graduate, undergraduate, high school, or NA for non-student posters.
  • Provide a title that accurately summarizes the subject of the presentation.
  • Indicate names and affiliations of all authors (include address, phone, and e-mail).
  • Bold and underline the name(s) of the presenting author(s).
  • Provide an abstract not to exceed 250 words.
  • Abstract must state the purpose, significant results, and main conclusion of work.
  • Abstract should be single-spaced using 12-point Times Roman. Abstracts should be submitted as a Microsoft Word document or as an rtf file.

Please submit abstracts as an e-mail attachment to [email protected].

On Campus Event: ‘Bowdoin’s Local Ethic’ (Enviro Lunch), 12/7 12-1:30 Mitchell South (Thorne)

Enviro Lunch: Bowdoin’s Local Ethic
Wed. 12/7 12:00-1:30 pm
Mitchell South dining Room, Thorne Hall

Bowdoin prides itself on its connection to place, and one of the way that manifests is through its commitment to local food. Come discuss why that is important, how it happens, and who makes the decisions with a Bowdoin chef, gardener, and sustainability coordinator. This will be an informal discussion over lunch in Mitchell South in Thorne from 12:00- 1:30pm.

bd

On Campus Event: Smithsonian Environmental Research Center – “Adaptation in the sea: insights from marine invaders.” 12/8/2016 4:00pm-5:00pm

Smithsonian Environmental Research Center – “Adaptation in the sea: insights from marine invaders (Carolyn Tepolt, Smithsonian postdoctoral fellow)
Thursday, Dec. 8 4:00
Location:
Druckenmiller Hall, Room 020

Marine invasive species are both subjects and agents of environmental change. As subjects, they face novel selective pressures in new environments. As agents, they can profoundly impact the ecology and evolution of invaded communities.

In her talk, Dr. Tepolt will discuss examples of both kinds of adaptation in crab species, integrating approaches from ecology, physiology, and genomics. In the invasive European green crab, temperature appears to have shaped physiology and genomics in under 100 years. In the native white-fingered mud crab, an invasive body-snatching parasite impacts host populations very differently depending on their co-evolutionary history.

Carolyn Tepolt is currently a Smithsonian postdoctoral fellow, and will be starting as an Assistant Scientist at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in March.  She has a Bachelor’s degree from the College of William & Mary, a Master’s degree from the University of Otago, and a PhD from Stanford’s Hopkins Marine Station.