Click on Submit Your Ideas for Future Programs if you would like to suggest other programs or speakers.
Note: Meetings start at 7:30 pm on the second Tuesday of the month, except for the May meeting, which is at 7:30 pm on the first Tuesday in May, and the annual meeting, which usually begins at 6:00 or 6:30 p.m. on the second Tuesday in February. Click here for more information about our meetings.
January 12, 2010. Central United Methodist Church
Dr. Jason Garvon, Assistant Professor of Biology at Lake Superior State University, will present a program on the current honeybee crisis, Honeybees at Risk: The Facts About Colony Collapse Disorder. According to the recent PBS program Silence of the Bees, millions of honeybees disappeared from their hives in the winter of 2006 in a phenomenon now known as colony collapse disorder. Because honeybees are essential pollinators of many fruits and vegetables, such disappearances put crops at risk and threaten the food supply. Jason will describe the search to discover what is killing the honeybees and to find out what can be done to help the honeybee population recover.
Additional information will be provided in Next Program prior to the meeting date.
February 9, 2010. Cisler Center, Lake Superior State University
Dr. Michael Doyle, a consulting scientist and a Kellogg/APLU FSLI Fellow (American Public and Land
Grant Universities/Food Systems Leadership Institute), will provide an illustrated presentation, The End of the Earth—The Southern Ocean, The Falklands, and Antarctica. The Southern Ocean is a distinct ecologic realm which includes a continent (Antarctica), countless islands, and incredible marine lifeabsent elsewhere. This presentation will provide an introduction to the seldom-visited Falkland (Malvinas) Islands, Antarctica, and some of its unique wildlife—especially penguins. The presentation is based on Dr. Doyle's research on the Southern Ocean and a trip he led there last year.
March 9, 2010. Central United Methodist Church
To be announced. Susan Sanders' presentation, originally scheduled for this date, has been rescheduled to Oct. 12, 2010.
April 13, 2010. Central United Methodist Church
Evelyn Simon will give us an illustrated presentation about her Travels with Charlie. Evelyn and Charles (Chuck) Bosley have been world travelers since their retirement; they have shared similar interests and traveled together for 15 years. They have visited 6 continents (and many islands) where they have (for example) trekked to the gorillas in Uganda E.A.; visited the bat caves in Kalimantan; sailed to the Turtle Island Research Station and viewed the Green Sea Turtles laying their eggs; seen the orangutans, proboscis monkeys & gibbon apes in Sabah, Borneo; and stroked the great gray whales in Baja, Mexico. They also participated in the Sault Naturalists’ outing on the Queen Charlotte Islands. Evelyn will highlight some of these adventures via Chuck’s pictures.
May 4, 2010. Great Lakes Forestry Centre
Bill Purnis will share his travel adventures to Iceland, The Land of Ice and Fire. Bill and his wife Flo have traveled extensively around the world since retiring in 1998-99. Birding becae a serious hobby in June 2008 when they joined 20 dedicated birders on a trip to Iceland with Elderhostel. Their birding experience in this North Atlantic Island setting with its volcanic activity and glaciers made their stay a most unusual and rewarding one.
June 8, 2010. Great Lakes Forestry Centre
Harvey Robbins, recently retired from a 33-year career as Professor and Department Head at Sault College, will present a program on Copper Canyon and the Mazatlan region of Mexico. This visual presentation will cover the Mazatlan beach and island shoreline, the Tufted Jay reserve high in the mountains to the east and the Copper Canyon experience to the north. Emphasis will be on the birds, animals and flora of this highly diverse region in northwest Mexico.
September 14, 2010. Great Lakes Forestry Centre
Nature photographer Paul Rossi will present a program on bird photography. Rossi's background in biology and animal physiology led him into explorations of bird behavior and an interest in capturing images of the beauty of birds in nature. He says "I have, after many years, come to see photography as an art which allows the photographer to preserve moments in nature, while emphasizing color, lighting, and composition." Current technology allows him "to combine in-the-field experience with reflexes, timing, and hand-to-eye coordination, in order to capture certain flight images and behaviors," but he admits that simply being in the right place at the right time plays a big role in capturing the most rewarding images.
October 12, 2010. Great Lakes Forestry Centre
Susan Sanders will tell us about her Travels in Ecuador and Peru. Susan’s cruise took her to five of the Galapagos Islands, down the Amazon from the Andes, and elsewhere in Ecuador and Peru. Her presentation will include photos of some of the flora and fauna she saw, including Galapagos penguins, blue-footed boobies, iguanas, sea turtles, and Galapagos tortoises (the largest living tortoise). She also visited the Charles Darwin Research Station on Santa Cruz Island, where Galapagos tortoises are being bred to save them from extinction.
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