• SEMINAR – A World Upside Down: Charting climate and biodiversity futures in Africa and the global south

    107 Norman Smith Hall Mitchell Center - UMaine, Orono, ME, United States

    SPEAKER: Phoebe Barnard, South African National Biodiversity Institute We may think we know where the world is headed, but our toolbox is both slim and skewed toward lessons and assumptions from the wealthy North. Most of our ecological paradigms are still drawn from north-temperate regions, while the very different southern hemisphere has dawdled in fields […]

    Free
  • SEMINAR – Engaging in Sustainability Debates: The Role of Universities, Experts, and Journalists in Promoting Collaboration and Innovation

    On issues ranging from climate change and energy to food production and conservation, experts and their institutions are increasingly called up on to communicate with the public, advise policymakers, and/or to advocate on behalf of causes. In this regard, for scientists and other experts, navigating the often polarized terrain of sustainability controversies requires a careful […]

  • SEMINAR – Disturbance and Restoration in Streams

    107 Norman Smith Hall Mitchell Center - UMaine, Orono, ME, United States

    SPEAKER: Sam Lake, Emeritus Professor, Monash Univeristy, Melbourne, Australia Co-sponsored by the School of Biology & Ecology After receiving his PH.D from the University of Southampton, in 1967 Dr. Sam Lake was appointed to the Zoology Department of the University of Tasmania where his research focus was mainly on the impacts of heavy metals on […]

    Free
  • SEMINAR – Does the value of nature depend on whom you ask? Should it?

    107 Norman Smith Hall Mitchell Center - UMaine, Orono, ME, United States

    SPEAKER: Aaron Strong, Assistant Professor, School of Marine Sciences, UMaine Through rapid and persistent anthropogenic global change, we now recognize that human activity is at risk of fundamentally altering the functioning of the earth system. The consequences for human livelihoods of such changes are likely to be devastating. As humanity has entered the Anthropocene, there […]

    Free
  • SEMINAR – Conserving small natural features with large ecological importance

    107 Norman Smith Hall Mitchell Center - UMaine, Orono, ME, United States

    Speakers: Aram Calhoun and Malcolm 'Mac' Hunter, Professors, Dept. of Wildlife, Fisheries, & Conservation Biology, Mitchell Center Fellows, UMaine Seminar is co-sponsored by the Dept. of Wildlife, Fisheries, and Conservation Biology at UMaine. Small Natural Features (SNFs) are analogous to keystone species in that they have ecological importance that is disproportionate to their small size. […]

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  • Northern Maine Children’s Water Festival

    University of Maine Orono, ME, United States

    The Northern Maine Children’s Water Festival promotes hands on learning about water issues. This one-day event bring together over 600 students and their teachers.

    Free
  • SEMINAR – Creating a Decision Support Toolbox for Safe Beaches & Shellfish Harvests

    107 Norman Smith Hall Mitchell Center - UMaine, Orono, ME, United States

    Speakers: New England Sustainability Consortium (NEST) Decision Support Systems Team Kate Beard (Computing and Information Science), Damian Brady (Marine Sciences), Brian McGill (Biology and Ecology, Mitchell Center), Bridie McGreavy (Communication & Journalism), Sam Roy (Mitchell Center), Sean Smith (Earth & Climate Sciences, Mitchell Center) Through a combination of interviews, stakeholder meetings and background research, a […]

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