Note to Editors: Stuart Pimm can be reached for additional comment at (919) 613-8141 or stuartpimm@me.com. Maureen Finnerty can be reached at (571) 271-1433 or Maureen_finnerty@protectnps.org. Jeffrey Vincent can be reached at (919) 613-8025 or jeff.vincent@duke.edu.
DURHAM, N.C. -- A new independent institute located at 91社区福利 will work to preserve America鈥檚 national parks and protected areas through research, education and public outreach.
鈥淥ur parks and protected areas face mounting pressures from climate change, invasive species, pollution and other long-term environmental threats, at a time when resources to manage these lands are shrinking,鈥 said Stuart L. Pimm, Doris Duke Professor of Conservation at Duke.
The new Park Institute of America aims to address these issues, Pimm said. It will sponsor research that leads to innovative new management practices and enhanced training for park managers, and it will work to raise public awareness of the challenges parks and protected areas face and the benefits they provide.
The Park Institute will promote greater use of protected public lands as long-term research sites and fund student internships and other educational programs in conservation and environmental management.
The institute is a collaboration between Duke鈥檚 Nicholas School of the Environment and the Coalition to Protect America鈥檚 National Parks, a nonprofit organization of former National Park Service employees. It will be an independent organization housed on Duke鈥檚 campus.
A key part of the new institute鈥檚 mission, said Coalition Chair Maureen Finnerty, will be to act as a nonpartisan convener that brings together people from diverse fields, institutions and backgrounds to identify new ways forward.
The institute plans to host ongoing scientific seminars and public meetings on park-related issues, to be held at Duke and other institutions engaged in the conservation of protected areas nationwide. It also plans to harness new communication technologies, including social media, to share the latest scientific findings with policymakers and the public.
鈥淏y providing ways to share information more freely, and in a timely and accessible manner, we can help unite a wider audience around shared goals, which is critical for forging real solutions鈥 Finnerty said. 鈥淟ocating the institute at Duke allows us to leverage the university鈥檚 leadership in environmental research and education circles, which will be crucial.鈥
The Park Institute of America will join the E.O. Wilson Biodiversity Foundation and the Organization for Tropical Studies as leading independent nonprofit conservation organizations located at Duke.
The university鈥檚 location in the culturally and ethnically diverse Research Triangle region of North Carolina is also a plus, Finnerty said, because it will afford the new institute greater opportunities for educational outreach to students traditionally underrepresented in the environmental field. Duke鈥檚 track record for creating interdisciplinary institutes, such as the Nicholas Institute for Environmental Policy Solutions, was another factor in deciding to locate the new initiative at the university.
Working with Finnerty, Duke researchers are conferring with leaders at the National Park Service and other universities and nonprofit organizations to identify the most critical issues facing parks and protected areas today and determine which parks may be best suited to serve as field research sites in the search for solutions.
They are also exploring potential sources of funding to support the institute鈥檚 research initiatives and educational outreach, which may include scholarships for students to work in parks and protected areas, or new funding for citizen science programs there.
鈥淚t鈥檚 still too early to say which issues we鈥檒l focus our resources on first. The challenge will be narrowing them down,鈥 Finnerty said. 鈥淭he glaciers in Glacier National Park are disappearing. In the Everglades, there鈥檚 a constant struggle with the quality, quantity, timing and distribution of water. And many of our national historic treasures such as the National Mall, the Statue of Liberty, and numerous coastal forts are being threatened by rising sea levels. Virtually every protected area in the nation faces critical threats. We鈥檝e reached a tipping point where managers can no longer be reasonably expected to go it alone.鈥
鈥淭hese parks and protected areas represent extraordinary scientific assets,鈥 said Jeffrey Vincent, Clarence F. Korstian Professor of Forest Economics and Management at Duke. 鈥淭hey can serve as long-term natural laboratories to study ecological processes, climate change, natural adaptation to ecological disturbances, new approaches to multi-use resource management, and a host of other issues that affect ecosystems and communities worldwide and span the sciences and social sciences.
鈥淭he benefits of this work will extend far beyond park borders,鈥 he said.
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