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  • Created 27 Jul 2020

These are the four projects for this Faculty Mentoring Network (FMN). During the Fall 2020 semester, participants will implement all or portions of one or more projects into their teaching. These projects cover a range of topics, so please select the activities that will fit best into your course curriculum.


Plants in the Human-Altered Environment (PHAE), developed & led by Dr. Jason Kilgore and Dr. Karen Kuers.
Woody plants provide an amazing variety of services to other organisms, including humans, many of which are overlooked in the human-altered environment. This project brings students face-to-face with the plants that share their neighborhoods or campuses. Students will use online resources to identify and classify their plot, and will then establish plots and measure the abundance, biomass, diversity, and ecosystem services provided by plants as a function of the intensity of landscape alteration. They will also relate these data to nation-wide datasets on plants within the human-altered environment. This project can be implemented across a range of environments, used by independent students or groups of students, and lasts from 2 to 4 laboratory sessions. 

Training Webinar (1 hour): https://youtu.be/6pXhtATfwAU

A project to compare effects of a continuum of landscape alteration intensities on plant diversity, biomass, and ecosystem services, and to explore human socioeconomic connections to plants in the environment.
eren, NEON, diversity, biomass, 4DEE Framework, ecosystem, socioeconomic effects
1.7K
455
1
0
08.2020


Backyard Beetles + Pollinators, developed & led by Dr. Kaitlin Stack Whitney

Students observe insect pollinators in their backyards, or campus, or nearby natural areas to describe plant-pollinator networks and assess how the assemblages from their sites compare to those in a range of landscapes. Ground beetles, some of which are critical and understudied plant pollinators, are of particular interest. Students will learn how and why NEON samples ground beetles, develop an appreciation of the ecosystem services provided by these often overlooked arthropods and have the option to set up their own NEON-style pitfall trap using common household materials.  Students will develop an appreciation of the ecosystem services provided by these often overlooked arthropods and how the assemblages of pollinators from their sites relate to the broader North American landscape. This project can be the subject of a course laboratory activity lasting between 2 and 4 weeks.

Training Webinar (1 hour): https://youtu.be/XQhNE3mIK44  

Students observe insect pollinators and other floral visitors in their backyards, or campus, or nearby natural areas to describe plant-pollinator networks and assess how the assemblages from their sites compare to those in a range of landscapes.
NEON, National Ecological Observatory Network
2.0K
468
1
0
08.2020


Mosquito Surveys along Anthropogenic Impact Gradients, developed & led by Dr. Allison Parker

This project explores the role of human land use and other environmental factors that affect native and invasive mosquito species distributions and the diseases that they can vector. Students can collect data on campus or from their homes by collecting water in containers and monitoring them for mosquito eggs and larvae. Publicly available nation-wide data on mosquito abundances will be examined relative to a variety of environmental variables and related back to data collected by students. This project can be the subject of a course laboratory activity lasting between 2 and 4 weeks.

Training Webinar (1 hour): https://youtu.be/CfPsuP50AaY

This project explores the role of human land use and other environmental factors that affect native and invasive mosquito species distributions and the diseases that they can vector.
1.1K
364
0
0
08.2020


Lichens in Diverse Landscapes, developed & led by Dr. Danielle Garneau, Dr. Matthew Heard, and Dr. Mary Beth Kolozsvary

Lichens are well-known sentinels of problems with air quality. This project makes use of publicly-available datasets on lichen presence and abundance and wet deposition, paired with geospatial data on air quality, tree canopy cover, and locally collected field data, to better understand how lichens respond to anthropogenic environmental pressures. Lichens will be related to environmental variables at a variety of spatial scales, from tree bark substrates to regional patterns of air quality. Students and instructors will explore and gain experience with GIS, NEON data, statistical analyses, and field data collection as part of this project. This project can be the subject of a course laboratory activity lasting between 1 and 3 weeks.

Training Webinar (1 hour): https://youtu.be/yLzEGF8EFUc  

Lichens in Diverse Landscapes: EREN-NEON Flexible Learning Project

Danielle Garneau, Matthew Joshua Heard, Mary Beth Kolozsvary

Version: 1.0

This project makes use of publicly-available datasets on lichen presence and abundance and wet deposition, paired with geospatial data on air quality, tree canopy cover, and locally collected field data, to better understand how lichens respond to changes
NEON, National Ecological Observatory Network
1.6K
432
9
0
08.2020