Tag: Rhodora

  • Friday, February 7, 7:00 pm Eastern – Two Tales of Floristic Change in Southern New England: Orchids and Northern Species, Live and Online

    Floras change over time in response to numerous variables, including land use changes, species introductions, climate change, and other factors. This New England Botanical Society talk at 7 pm on February 7 will examine and attempt to explain changes in frequencies of two groups of plants in southern New England: orchids and northern species (i.e., those near the southern end of their range). It will include a discussion of different data sources and their limitations and the challenges of dealing with potentially confounding factors. Speaker Dr. Robert Bertin is Professor Emeritus of Biology at the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester. The talk will be live and on Zoom.

    Non-members may register for the meeting access link here.

  • Saturday, June 15, 6:45 pm – Vermont’s Contribution to New England’s Rare Flora

    The New England Botanical Club is sponsoring an Away Weekend in Vermont June 14 – 16, and on Saturday, June 15, welcomes Bob Popp of the Vermont Fish and Wildlife Department, a botanist from Barre, Vermont, speaking on Vermont’s Contribution to New England’s Rare Flora. Bob’s talk will focus on the rare plants in the Champlain Valley. The lecture will be held at the Vermont Grange Center, 308 West Street in Brookfield, Vermont. Several workshops and field trips are planned for the weekend. The registration fee will cover accommodations at the Center, plus meals and activities. Reduced student rates and scholarships are available. For more information contact Matthew Charpentier at mpcharpentier93@gmail.com.

    Registration deadline is June 7. The complete weekend program schedule is available at http://www.rhodora.org/meetings/notices/June2019-Away-Vermont-Schedule.pdf

  • Friday, June 1 – Saturday, June 2 – Invasiveness of Intra-continental Exotic Plants in New England: Implications for Assisted Migration

    The New England Botanical Club will host an away meeting in western Massachusetts on June 1 and 2. Field trips are being planned for both Friday and Saturday to botanical hot spots around the Northampton area. On Friday afternoon-evening, there will be a reception and open house at the Smith College Botanic Garden in Northampton from 4-6PM, followed by a lecture by Dr. Gretel Clarke, Department of Biological Sciences, Smith College, on Invasiveness of intra-versus inter-continental exotic plants in New England: Implications for Assisted Migration.  On Saturday, there will be two workshops:

    Bryophyte Identification with Sue Williams – This workshop, based at Smith College’s MacLeish Field Station in Whately, MA, will provide an introduction to the basics of bryophyte ecology and identification. The workshop will begin with a short hike through an old hemlock and sugar maple forest area with a diverse assemblage of bryophytes. Samples will be collected for later observation and identification at the Bechtel Environmental Classroom building at the MacLeish Field Station; dissecting microscopes will be available. This workshop will run until mid-afternoon, please bring a bagged lunch.

    Herbarium Skills with Roberta Lombardi – This workshop, based at the University of Massachusetts – Amherst Herbarium, will focus on the techniques involved in collecting, pressing, mounting, and preserving plant specimens for herbarium collections. The workshop will start with a short field foray, after which participants will return to the UMass Herbarium to work with plant specimens, walk through the steps involved in mounting and labeling specimens, and get an overview of how large herbarium collections are organized and managed. This will be a valuable workshop for those interesting in formally documenting their local flora or preparing voucher specimens of plant species documented in their research.

    Saturday’s Field Trips include:

    Montague Sandplain and Will’s Hill – The trip will begin with a walk through the pitch pine-scrub oak communities of the Montague Sandplain, with huckleberry, chokeberry, sand cherry and others in flower, and passing through a well-managed population of native blue lupine. Next, we will traverse a powerline corridor over Will’s Hill, with species of “rich & rocky” sites like yellow star-grass, red columbine, and perfoliate-leaved bellflower, plus a healthy population of American bittersweet. As time & interest permit, we may also visit a few rich seepy sites on the forested portion of the Hill, with abundant spicebush, nodding trillium and others. Also be prepared for incidental reptiles and birds! Plan on 2.5-3 miles walking on level to gentle slopes. Please bring a bagged lunch and water.

    Historical Land Use Patterns and Forest Vegetation at the MacLeish Field Station (pictured below) – This field trip will explore the upland forests of Smith College’s MacLeish Field Station in Whately and Conway, MA with a particular focus on how 19th century agricultural land use patterns continue to affect plant species distributions and vegetation patterns in 21st century forests. We will explore old farm sites, see evidence of 19th century plow lines, and visit a remnant area of primary forest with increased plant diversity. Please bring a bagged lunch and water.

    Botanical Foray with members of the Franklin County Flora team – This field trip will be with key contributors to the Franklin County Flora project, and will explore sites of botanical interest in Franklin County. Please bring a bagged lunch and water.

    For full registration details visit http://www.rhodora.org/meetings/upcomingmeetings.html

  • Friday, February 2, 6:45 pm – Rare Vascular Plants in Massachusetts: Natural Heritage Maps the Mystery

    Dr. Bob Wernerehl, State Botanist, Massachusetts Natural Heritage & Endangered Species Program, Division of Fisheries & Wildlife, Westboro, Massachusetts, will speak to the New England Botanical Club on Friday, February 2 beginning at 6:45 in the Haller Lecture Hall, Room 102, Geological Museum, 24 Oxford Street in Cambridge, on the topic of Rare Vascular Plants in Massachusetts: Natural Heritage Maps the Mystery. Bob protects 300 rare plant species through conservation measures, ecological planning and inventory survey work, and lends support to many other conservation organizations in New England. The meeting is free and open to the public. For more information visit http://rhodora.org

  • Friday, December 1, 6:45 pm – New England Botanical Club Meeting with Dr. Alden Griffith

    The New England Botanical Club will meet Friday, December 1 at 6:45 pm and will host Dr. Alden Griffith, Assistant Professor of Environmental Studies at Wellesley College. Meetings at Harvard University are held in Haller Lecture Hall (Room 102), Geological Museum, 24 Oxford St., Cambridge, MA 02138 (door to right of Harvard Museum of Natural History entrance). Free and open to the public.

    Dr. Griffith is an ecologist focusing on invasive plant population dynamics and environmental influences. His work is conducted at the Boston Area Climate Experiment (BACE) in Waltham, MA and uses Persicaria lapathifolia as a model species. An important goal is to explicitly link environmental factors to population performance using integral projection models. This work is a collaboration with Vikki Rodgers at Babson College. Also, he studies the capacity for invasion of Bromus tectorum (‘cheatgrass’) in east coast dune systems. There has been much research into the invasion of B. tectorum in the Western U.S., but there is very little known about its potential in the east. This work is being conducted at the Cape Cod National Seashore and focuses on relating population success to factors of both the abiotic environment and the background plant community. Another area of inquiry is the population-level consequences of positive interactions among plants. Interactions among plants are often assumed to be negative (e.g. competition), but there is growing interest in the importance of positive interactions, or plant-plant facilitation, in ecological systems. His research, in collaboration with Ray Callaway at the University of Montana, examines the overall importance of facilitation by neighboring plants for Smelowskia calycina populations at high elevation in Glacier National Park.

    For more information visit www.rhodora.org. Image of dock leaved smartweed by David Cameron courtesy of our friends at New England Wildflower Society’s Go Botany!

  • In Memoriam – Elizabeth Farnsworth

    On October 27, Dr. Elizabeth Farnsworth, the New England Wild Flower Society’s senior research ecologist, died unexpectedly at her home in Amherst, Massachusetts. She was 54. For those who knew and worked with her, who played music, paddled, or hiked with her, who cleaned seeds beside her while swapping stories at the long tables at Garden in the Woods and Nasami Farm, who took her online courses or heard her lectures, “unexpectedly” is a vast understatement. The words “Elizabeth” and “died” do not belong on the same page. That she was in her prime, radiating warmth and vitality, a vivid picture of apple-cheeked, wild-maned health, makes this notion profoundly hard to accept, and bitterly unacceptable.

    After all, as one can imagine her shouting in the face of whatever stopped her heart that day, she still had so much to do.

    She already had packed a lot of achievement into her foreshortened life, as at least one grieving colleague observed. She was an accomplished botanist, educator, and scientific illustrator. At the time of her death, Elizabeth was co-leading the Society’s effort to conserve seeds of hundreds of rare plant species throughout New England. But Elizabeth’s many contributions to the Society started more than two decades ago. Recent members might know that she wrote, constructed, and taught the Society’s first set of online botany courses and wrote the ground-breaking “State of the Plants” report. A few years earlier, she co-led the National Science Foundation grant for developing Go Botany, our interactive online guide to the entire New England flora, and then won an additional grant from the same source to support student research in conservation biology. She coordinated planning for the conservation and management of more than 100 species of rare plants. She illustrated dozens of entries in Flora Novae Angliae by Arthur Haines, the Society’s research botanist. And with a grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services, she conducted an assessment of seed banking and collections practices at the Society and published a model protocol by which to prioritize target populations for seed collection. A natural and passionate teacher, Elizabeth jumped in to serve as interim education director in 2013, arranging all the courses the Society offered.

    The Society is not the only institution that will miss her and her scholarly contributions. When she died, Elizabeth was serving as senior editor of the botanical journal Rhodora and on the graduate faculties of the University of Massachusetts Amherst and the University of Rhode Island. Before that, she also had taught at Smith, Mount Holyoke, and Hampshire colleges and the Conway School of Landscape Design. As a writer, she displayed the rare ability to address both academic peers and novice botanists with equal clarity—and not a whit of condescension for the latter. To date, she had published 54 peer-reviewed scientific journal articles and 61 invited publications for public media. She also co-authored the award-winning A Field Guide to the Ants of New England, which she also illustrated; the Connecticut River Boating Guide: Source to Sea; and the Peterson Field Guide to the Ferns. Her delicate, precisely rendered illustrations also grace the pages of Natural Communities of New Hampshire and three other books.

    How, then, did she find time to deliver more than 230 invited presentations throughout the world, much less to sing and play guitar semi-professionally and paddle her prized hand-built kayak? Alas, it is too late to ask. She loved to travel, preferably in further exploration of the natural world, and, at various times in her career, she conducted research on ecosystems all over the globe, focusing on conservation, plant physiology, mangroves, and climate change. She served as a scientific consultant to the United Nations, the National Park Service, The Trustees of Reservations, the U.S. Forest Service, the Massachusetts and Connecticut Natural Heritage programs, and the Mount Grace Land Conservation Trust.

    Brilliance marked her early: At Brown University, Elizabeth earned her B.A. in environmental studies in seven semesters, graduating with honors. She went on to study at University of Vermont, receiving her M.S. in field botany. While earning her Ph.D. at Harvard University, she was awarded a Bullard Research Fellowship and a National Science Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship. Her dissertation on mangrove seedlings launched a journey to 17 countries as a Harvard Traveling Scholar, to conduct a comparative survey of mangroves. She was honored to be chosen as a teaching assistant to E. O. Wilson, with whom she shared a passion for ants.

    Elizabeth, a gifted storyteller, enjoyed sharing tales of her travels and other adventures—about the time all the members of the Grateful Dead crashed at the house she shared with roommates in college, about sitting around camp with David Attenborough in a South American rainforest, about leeches invading unmentionable places (which, of course, she mentioned). Now her friends, colleagues, and students are seeking solace by sharing our memories and stories about her.

    “She was that rare human being who was talented in both the sciences and the arts, who excelled in everything she did,” said Director of Conservation Bill Brumback, the person at the Society who has worked most closely with Elizabeth over the years. “And she made the world a little better for those who knew and worked with her.”

    For those who would like to honor Elizabeth’s legacy with a donation, her family suggests sending donations to New England Wild Flower Society, Hitchcock Center for the Environment, or any other conservation organization of the donor’s choice.

    Friends and family members are planning a memorial celebration in western Massachusetts, probably after Thanksgiving. For further information on developments, check http://newfs.org periodically.

  • Friday, November 3, 6:45 pm – Green Eggs and A.m (Ambystoma maculatum)

    On Friday, November 3, Dr. Louise Lewis, Professor, Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at the University of Connecticut, will present a lecture at the New England Botanical Club meeting entitled Green Eggs and A.m (Ambystoma maculatum).  Ambystoma maculatum is more widely known as the spotted salamander. Meetings at Harvard University are held in Haller Lecture Hall (Room 102), Geological Museum, 24 Oxford St., Cambridge, MA 02138 (door to right of Harvard Museum of Natural History entrance) Free and open to the pubic. For more information on the New England Botanical Club, visit http://www.rhodora.org.

  • Sunday, July 9 – New England Botanical Club Field Trip to Washington, Vermont

    Join The New England Botanical Club and explore interesting places with great plants, led by local expert botanists. Trips for June, July and August, 2017, are planned, and participants must contact the trip leader 1 week in advance. The second summer trip will take place Sunday, July 9 to Washington, Vermont.

    Field trip to typical, sugar maple forests of the Vermont Piedmont in the town of Washington (just north of Chelsea), Orange County, Vermont. Rich woods, fields, hedgerows and shrublines of the old hill-farm countryside. Terrain is hilly but not steep, easy walking on roads and trails, a lovely landscape. Collecting specimens for the Club herbarium is a feature of this trip. No “very special” habitats are here, but we will see some interesting plants including a positively identified Crataegus holmesiana (pictured), ginseng, ferns, woodland violets, and what-have-you. A very nice vernal pool is also on the property. Level of Difficulty – Easy. Trip Leader: Art Gilman (avgilman@together.net). Art will send meeting time, location and directions to those who register for the trip.

  • Saturday, June 17 – Arcadia Wildlife Management Area Field Trip

    Join The New England Botanical Club and explore interesting places with great plants, led by local expert botanists. Trips for June, July and August, 2017, are planned, and participants must contact the trip leader 1 week in advance. The first summer trip will take place Saturday, June 17 to Arcadia Wildlife Management Area in West Greenwich, Rhode Island.

    Arcadia WMA is one of the largest natural areas in the state. It includes a diverse array of habitats such as sandy pitch pine, oak/hickory/white pine forest, some forested wetlands, rivers, and Rhode Island’s only black spruce bog. We will focus on the Pine Top section, in the vicinity of Escoheag Hill in West Greenwich. There are some rich mesic forested areas with sugar maple; some early successional forest periodically cut; an old gravel parking lot being maintained as early successional habitat with some sandy, bog-like areas. We’ll also visit some forested seeps near the base of the hill, along the Wood River. Level of Difficulty -Moderate. We’ll be off-trail in a variety of habitats. Trip Leader: Tim Whitfeld (Timothy_Whitfeld@brown.edu) and Doug McGrady. Tim will send meeting time, location, and directions to those who register for the trip. Bring lunch, water, insect repellent, and if you wish, plant field guides, hand lens, etc.  Photo by Davis Hunter.

  • Friday, March 3, 6:45 pm – Creating and Leveraging a Virtual Herbarium of New England for Biodiversity Science

    The New England Botanical Club will hold its March meeting on Friday, March 3, beginning at 6:45 in the Haller Lecture Hall, Room 102, Geological Museum, 24 Oxford Street, Cambridge.  The featured speaker will be Dr. Charles Davis, Professor of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology and Curator of Vascular Plants, Harvard University.  His talk is entitled Creating and Leveraging a Virtual Herbarium of New England for Biodiversity Science.  The meeting is free and open to the public. For more information visit www.rhodora.org. Picture courtesy of Harvard Gazette.