 |
|
Dr. Amy Ward
|
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – A University of Alabama ecologist is
among a select group of scientists chosen to help develop guidelines
for a newly formed national organization focusing on environmental
science issues.
Dr. Amy Ward, professor of biological sciences and director of
UA’s Center
for Freshwater Studies, was selected to serve as part of the
planning and design committee for the National Ecological Observatory
Network, known as NEON.
NEON, proposed by the National Science Foundation, is a national,
interdisciplinary undertaking designed to answer scientific questions
and to achieve credible ecological forecasting. Social scientists
and educators are teaming with ecologists and physical scientists
to focus on matters such as biodiversity, climate change, infectious
disease, invasive species and land use.
Ward, a faculty member in UA’s College
of Arts and Sciences, founded and directs UA’s Center
for Freshwater Studies and heads a graduate education program
to support students in freshwater studies. In the Integrative
Graduate Education and Research Training program, known as IGERT,
UA faculty from biological sciences, geography and geology participate
jointly with faculty in similar areas from the University of
New Mexico.
The program allows students from each of the two universities
to travel to the other region and study freshwater environments
in contrasting climates. The students also participate in externships
with state and federal agencies where they apply what they’ve
learned in dissertation research to real-world problems.
Under Ward’s direction, the Center for Freshwater Studies
is dedicated to understanding and preserving water, the environment
in and around it, and the plants and animals, including people,
that depend on it. This teaching, research and outreach program
draws together faculty from the College of Arts and Sciences, the
College of Engineering, the School of Law and the Culverhouse College
of Commerce and Business Administration.
|