Through this new interdisciplinary center, Allegheny College faculty and students will collaborate with community partners to engage in conservation-based research and educational outreach in the upper Allegheny River basin, focusing on the French Creek Watershed.
The Allegheny River basin forms the headwaters of the Ohio River Watershed.
“The Richard King Mellon Foundation is a longtime and generous supporter of Allegheny College, and we are very grateful for the foundation’s vision in providing this funding to create the Watershed Conservation Research Center,” Allegheny College President Hilary L. Link said. “The center will further enhance the college’s nationally recognized commitment to sustainability and our distinctive approach to education, which challenges students to examine issues from multiple perspectives to solve problems. The grant will also help us to strengthen new and existing partnerships with our local community, allowing us to promote the immense potential of the French Creek watershed as a destination point for nature tourism and related sustainable economic development.”
Allegheny College was one of the first 10 institutions of higher education in the U.S. to achieve carbon neutrality. For the last five years, the college’s environmental science and sustainability program has been listed among the top five in the U.S. for its interdisciplinary, experiential approach.
“Allegheny College is a proven conservation partner in an important ecological region of Western Pennsylvania,” said Sam Reiman, director of the Richard King Mellon Foundation. “We are pleased to support the college’s Watershed Conservation Research Center, which will expand the college’s ability to conduct in-depth environmental research; to teach watershed stewardship; and to foster community partnerships to promote sustainable activation of the French Creek and upper Allegheny River watersheds.”
Allegheny College environmental science and sustainability faculty Casey Bradshaw-Wilson and Kelly Pearce are co-directors of the WCRC.
The WCRC will address a longstanding need for a formal research center focused on the extremely biodiverse French Creek watershed, said Pearce. The center’s work will focus on three pillars: research, partnerships and education.
“Allegheny students are the foundation of this center. Our overarching goal is to teach and train them to become watershed stewards — to take what they’ve learned here and apply it to any watershed that they live in for the rest of their lives,” said Bradshaw-Wilson, an assistant professor of environmental science and sustainability who also teaches in the biology department.
Through the WCRC, Allegheny College faculty and student researchers will collect data to advance scientific knowledge to aid in the protection of aquatic and terrestrial wildlife species/habitats. Researchers will also assess the watershed’s value for regional economies.
Using new and existing data, the WCRC will help to identify areas of highest conservation value and greatest need for restoration and monitoring of aquatic invertebrates, fish and wildlife species.
“We are very excited to engage our students in local conservation and foster a strong interest in watersheds, teaching the importance of treating these systems as whole systems,” said Pearce, an assistant professor of environmental science and sustainability.
Conservation is an interdisciplinary field of study and that is reflected in the center’s ethos, Bradshaw-Wilson said. “What happens on land really influences what happens in the water. And that’s why we wanted to expand the center’s focus to encompass the aquatic environment as well as the terrestrial environment, including the wildlife and people who live there.”
Pearce added that having that “bird’s eye view” will help those involved in the center better understand the watershed, identify potential problems and work with others to develop comprehensive solutions.
That broad perspective also sets the stage for faculty and students from across the Allegheny College campus to become involved in the center.
“We want it to be an interdisciplinary effort where we’re not just doing physical science or ecology work,” Bradshaw-Wilson said.
For example, faculty and students could study economic factors in the watershed. The center will take an interdisciplinary approach to science communication, uniting conservation research with the creative arts, humanities and social sciences to share stories to promote the watershed and educate the public.
Partnerships with the community will also be fundamental to the WCRC’s work.
“Our goal is to collaborate with all of the great community partners that do really wonderful work in the watershed and aid them in whatever way they need help,” Pearce said.
The WCRC will engage organizations, government agencies and the private sector to create student internships, identify research needs, conduct targeted conservation research and evaluate ways to promote sustainable nature tourism.
The center will use state-of-the-art technology to monitor water chemistry and quality, implement conservation actions and solutions, provide education and outreach, and promote the potential of the region to serve as a destination for ecotourism.
In addition, the WCRC will work closely with the Allegheny College Creek Connections program, which engages K-12 students in conservation and education activities in the watershed.
“We have such wonderful students here at Allegheny,” Pearce said. “So the opportunity to work one-on-one with them in conducting meaningful research that can have a long-lasting impact on our local region is what excites us most about this opportunity.”
NewsClip:
-- MeadvilleT: Mellon Foundation Grant To Help Allegheny Create Watershed Research Center
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