Partner organizations will include Audubon Society of Western Pennsylvania, Phipps Conservatory and Botanical Gardens, Pittsburgh Botanic Garden, and other organizations.
CMNH cares for a collection of more than 550,000 plants specimens, the largest collection of Western Pennsylvanian plants in the world.
The museum will leverage this collection and the scientific expertise of its own researchers and partner organizations to create and distribute a robust toolkit of resources designed to generate public awareness of invasive plants’ impact on local ecosystems and what people can do to slow their spread and prevent future introductions.
Resources are anticipated to include museum exhibition content, digital assets, videos, maps, infographics, printed materials, and shared messaging that can be customized to the unique needs of each participating organization’s audience.
The campaign will be distributed across a variety of outlets, including social media, printed handouts, and interpretive displays.
“We’re grateful to the Richard King Mellon Foundation for this opportunity to convene the expertise of amazing colleagues in sister institutions to develop best practices for communicating about invasive species,” said Mason Heberling, CMNH’s Associate Curator of Botany. “We hope to cultivate an already growing audience and to empower the people of Western Pennsylvania to make a difference in the prevention and management of invasive species.”
The campaign will launch later in 2023 and continue through December of 2024, but the outcomes will continue well beyond that timeline. CMNH content will include a new interactive exhibit in the museum’s Hall of Botany and an exhibit at Powdermill Nature Reserve, the museum’s environmental research center located in the Laurel Highlands.
CMNH will also create a free online repository for educational materials and curate a social media campaign linking the institutional partners to generate awareness and community participation across their respective networks of followers.
“From weeds in your garden to invasive species in natural areas, the topic of introduced plants is not only a scientifically complex problem, but also a societally complex one,” added Heberling. “Many invasive plants were intentionally planted at first—and some continue to be planted—with environmental consequences often realized only decades later. Species invasions are one of the top drivers of biodiversity change, here in Pennsylvania and around the world.”
For more information on programs, initiatives, educational resources and upcoming events, visit the Carnegie Museum of Natural History website.
(Photo: Associate Curator of Botany Mason Heberling with knotweed, an invasive plant.)
[Posted: July 11, 2023] PA Environment Digest
No comments :
Post a Comment