Coral Reef Ecosystem Science Award

1997-02-26 Thread STEFANIE S. RIXECKER

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

--- Forwarded Message Follows ---


USF GRADUATE STUDENT IS AWARDED FIRST ISRS-SOLLINS GRADUATE
FELLOWSHIP IN CORAL REEF ECOSYSTEM SCIENCE

Dr. John C. Ogden, President of the International Society for Reef
Studies (ISRS) announced today that Melanie Dotherow-McField, a
graduate student in the Department of Marine Science at the
University of South Florida, has been awarded the first
ISRS-Sollins Fellowship in Coral Reef Ecosystem Science.  The
fellowship, worth approximately $13,000, was established last year
by Professor Phillip Sollins of Oregon State University with a
donation to the Society in partnership with the Center
for Marine Conservation in Washington, DC.  Ms.McField's
application was selected by a committee of the ISRS and the CMC
from a total of 29 applicants from all over the world.

Ms. McField has worked in Belize since 1990, as a biologist with
the Hol Chan Marine Reserve, as the Belize Representative of the
International Tropical Conservation Foundation, and as a consultant
with the Coastal Zone Management Project. She also served on the
Board of Directors of the Belize Audubon Society.  Ms. McField will
use this Fellowship to support her graduate research on a survey of
coral reef community structure and the investigation of their
relationship to existing reef management efforts at various
locations along the barrier reef complex. The information collected
will also represent the baseline data for a long-term coral reef
monitoring program conducted with the assistance of the Belize
Fisheries Department and Coastal Zone Management Project. As a
citizen of Belize, she will assist in the continuation of these
conservation efforts in Belize upon completion of her PhD.

Ms. McField's graduate supervisor is Dr. Pamela Hallock-Muller,
Professor of Marine Science, who began her research on coral reefs
as a graduate student at the University of Hawaii in the 1970's.
Dr. Hallock and her graduate students at USF are investigating
human impacts on coral reef ecosystems, including nutrient
enrichment, diver impacts, and ultraviolet radiation.

Dr. Steven Miller, ISRS Recording Secretary, who organized the
applications and the review said: "We are very grateful to
Professor Sollins for establishing this fellowship at the start of
the 1997 International Year of the Reef, a global effort to
raise public consciousness about threatened coral reefs."  The
coral reefs of Belize are among the most magnificent in the
Caribbean Sea.

The International Society for Reef Studies is an organization of
800 members from over 50 countries including students, scientists,
resource managers, and policy-makers dedicated to the production
and dissemination of scientific knowledge and understanding of
coral reefs, both living and fossil.  The ISRS publishes the
scientific journal CORAL REEFS, the newsletter REEF ENCOUNTER, and
holds an international meeting each year.  Every four years the
Society co-sponsors the International Coral Reef Symposium.  The last
Symposium, organized by the University of Panama and the Smithsonian
Institution, was held in Panama last June and attracted
over 1300 participants from all over the world.  The next one will
be held in Indonesia in the year 2000.

For additional information contact:

Dr. Steven Miller
NOAA Nat. Undersea Res. Prog.
514 Caribbean Drive
Key Largo, FL 33037
Tel: 305-451-0233
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

OR

John C. OgdenDirectorPhone:  813/893-9100
Florida Institute of OceanographyFax:813/893-9109
830 First Street South   St. Petersburg, Florida 33701

--
Peter F. Brussard
Department of Biology/314
University of Nevada
Reno, NV 89557
Telephone (702) 784-1360
FAX (702) 784-1369
Internet [EMAIL PROTECTED]







Stefanie S. Rixecker
Department of Resource Management
Lincoln University, Canterbury
Aotearoa New Zealand
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]




Re: Ecofeminists and the Land

1997-02-26 Thread 8.7.6/8.7.3/AOL-2.0.0

I think you should go out and talk to the locals in County government to get
a feel for 
how "Newbies" to the outlland deal with the land.  Then check out the local
newspapers or, again, the county (planning, growth management, or health
department officials) for local groups that have different agendas and ideas
about stewardship of the land.  They can point out folks for you to
interview.
I can suggest one thing, based on what is happening here in Mason County.
 Most people are woefully free of knowledge about land, soils, ecosystems,
water cycles, aquifer recharge areas, and critical ecosystem interactions.
 There is currently a woman here who is finishing her M.S. and she hopes to
create a kind of home owner's guide to land.  We really really need that.  We
often come across folks with different stewardship ideas, ranging from
protect it to sell it, but they cannot fully implement their ideas because
they lack the basic knowledge to either make the least impact on the land, or
even to get the biggest buck for it.  Um, I just read what I wrote and it's
kind of stuffy, huh?  

DMADRONE
From [EMAIL PROTECTED] Thu Feb 27 09:04:59 1997
for [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Thu, 27 Feb 1997 11:04:42 -0500 (EST)
Date: Thu, 27 Feb 1997 11:04:40 -0500 (EST)
From: Little School Girl [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: STUDIES IN WOMEN AND ENVIRONMENT [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Population Issues
In-Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

I msut write a research paper for a class entitled "Gender Space and
Place" at Syracuse University.  My topic is Women in the Timber Industry
in western Canada and the USA.  Any information is greatly appreciated.
Thanks in advance
Cheers lori jean standley