I distinguish science communication from science writing. If you think about a science paper, you provide lots of references, which is the scientific context for that study. Science communication provides societal examples, because it’s all about context, to make the message translate to a broader audience. In scientific literature, there is usually just text, while [...]
Continue Reading »March 12, 2012
March 9, 2012
Innovations in Environmental Synthesis, Reporting and Governance: Part 4 – The Annapolis Synthesis Center
In the middle of the National Environmental Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS) seagrass project, we created the Annapolis Synthesis Center. Annapolis is much like Santa Barbara, it’s a cute town that you can walk around in, fly in without getting in a car, and it’s the capital of Maryland as well as home [...]
Continue Reading »March 7, 2012
Innovations in Environmental Synthesis, Reporting and Governance: Part 3 – National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis
At the National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis, we formed a seagrass working group, recruiting colleagues to help populate a global database of seagrass trajectories. We focused on what we could document in terms of seagrass area, density, biomass and cover. And then we used that database, interrogated it and wrote scientific papers. The [...]
Continue Reading »March 5, 2012
Innovations in Environmental Synthesis, Reporting and Governance: Part 2 – Innovations in Synthesis
The synthesis I want to talk about is that synthesis that leads to environmental outcomes, so this isn’t just writing books and papers for colleagues, it is taking that next step to generate environmental outcomes in terms of policy, in terms of planning, in terms of implementation and in terms of directing our resources towards [...]
Continue Reading »March 2, 2012
Innovations in Environmental Synthesis, Reporting and Governance: Part 1 – Introduction
I want to talk about innovations in environmental synthesis, reporting and governance and how these innovations apply to the Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Network in Australia. And I’ll start by explaining a little bit about where I’m currently based at the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science. We are right on the shores of the [...]
Continue Reading »February 29, 2012
Brisbane 2011: Living with Floods and Dancing with Dugongs: Part 15- Questions from the Seminar
QUESTION: One of the things we have been noticing through the Healthy Country project is there has been a complete lack of people coming up through the system that have the skills and the capacity actually, more or less, to do what we needed. Your advice that it is necessary for us to make this [...]
Continue Reading »February 27, 2012
Brisbane 2011: Living with Floods and Dancing with Dugongs: Part 14- The Dugong Rock
The seminar was rounded off by some dancing with Dewey the Dugong, thanks to Dr. Peter Oliver who wrote and performed ‘Dugong Rock’. Peter also inspired the dancing with his Dugong Rock competition. Also, thanks to Dr. Tanzi Smith, a former University of Queensland student now working in the Mary River Catchment, who drove Dewey [...]
Continue Reading »February 24, 2012
Brisbane 2011: Living with Floods and Dancing with Dugongs: Part 13- Conclusion
I want to wrap up with a little bit of vision towards the future and a ray of hope and optimism. And that comes from an analysis I did of the history of paradigm shifts that have occurred in societies starting in the 1500′s. There is a great book, “Human accomplishment: the pursuit of excellence [...]
Continue Reading »February 22, 2012
Brisbane 2011: Living with Floods and Dancing with Dugongs: Part 12- Charismatic Environmental Initiatives
Globally, seagrasses are a good indicator of ecosystem health, and so we have gone and put a global database together and started analyzing this and we’ve written a bunch of papers. This is one of the graphics from a paper showing that there is a preponderance of seagrass area data in North America, Europe and [...]
Continue Reading »February 20, 2012
Brisbane 2011: Living with Floods and Dancing with Dugongs: Part 11- Monitoring of the Moreton Bay
So let’s look at Moreton Bay. The Brisbane River catchment soils were heavily eroded, and several folks from Healthy Country helped us assemble this story. We saw large-scale sediment erosion, and we can see boulders that rolled down the stream like pebbles. In some places the granitic bedrock was eroded thirty centimeters, taking the soil [...]
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