Tag: Conservation International

  • Saturday, April 2, 8:00 am – 4:00 pm – 2016 Massachusetts Land Trust Coalition Conservation Conference

    The 2016 Massachusetts Land Trust Coalition Conservation Conference will take place Saturday, April 2, from 8 – 4 at Worcester Technical High School. One Skyline Drive in Worcester. This annual, day-long training and networking event provides an opportunity to participate in a full day of workshops and discussions that focus on fostering healthy communities in Massachusetts through land conservation. Join your colleagues in land conservation and acquire the information, skills, and connections you need to be most effective.

    The conference is attended annually by land trust board members and staff; parks administrators and advocates; federal, state and local government employees; planners; foresters, students, and philanthropists. Register online at http://www.massland.org/conference

    Dr. M. Sanjayan will give the keynote address entitled How Nature Can Save Us. We live in the Anthropocene—the Age of Man—and not since cyanobacteria transformed the earth’s early atmosphere has one species, humans, had such an outsized influence on the diversity of life on our planet. How to go about saving nature in the human age is understandably challenging. But perhaps we have been asking the wrong question and it’s nature that can actually save us.  Dr. M. Sanjayan, a global conservation scientist and executive vice president at Conservation International, will discuss reframing conservation by making it about human well being. He will talk about how human communities are helping nature thrive and how bringing people into the picture—that is, emphasizing that humans are a part of our world’s natural systems and not separate from them—complements traditional conservation tools such as protecting important natural areas.  Photo from www.blog.conservation.org.

  • Thursday, September 19, 6:30 pm – 7:30 pm – Teeming with Trees: An Armchair Tour of an African Hotspot

    The Maputaland-Pondoland-Albany Hotspot in southern Africa’s eastern region holds the highest tree diversity of any of the world’s temperate forests, with nearly 600 tree species represented. In total, about 8,100 species of plants from 243 families occur within this hotspot, and nearly a quarter of these are found nowhere else [Conservation International]. Botanist, artist, author, and guide Elsa Pooley has spent years identifying, studying, painting, and cataloging the flora of this second richest floristic region in Africa and an important center of plant endemism. She will speak about some of the Hotspot’s most interesting habitats and the plants found there, with a primary focus on its trees, on Thursday, September 19 at 6:30 at the Hunnewell Building of the Arnold Arboretum.  $10 for the general public, free to Arboretum members.  Register at https://my.arboretum.harvard.edu/SelectDate.aspx.

    http://www.eoearth.org/files/143901_144000/143963/miombo_woodlands.jpg