SUMMER 2011
Message from the Director EPSCoR is about building a cohesive scientific research and education community. As we refine our concept of ONEIdaho with our Universities, Colleges, STEM Outreach and partners in agencies, the private sector and NGOs, it is exciting to reflect on some of the recent developments in Idaho. Several of the stories in this Newsletter are great examples of how EPSCoR is a catalyst in building regional partnerships. It is intriguing to think what might be next as a result of our faculty taking a genuine interest in working together. For example, Dr. Jen Pierce recently led a team of researchers and students on an expedition down the Middle Fork of the Salmon River in August. This event provided quality time for the inter-disciplinary EPSCoR team and other researchers from the region to debate the current research and brainstorm future directions. Her goal for the trip was to find ways to integrate the ecologic, hydrologic and geomorphic data that have been assembled through EPSCoR. Specifically, they examined relationships among forest fires, debris flows, ecologic diversity, and land-water interactions, and how these landscapes and ecosystems may vary with future climate Peter Goodwin, change. We look forward to seeing what new Project Director science will emerge from the turbulence!!
Dr. Jen Pierce, Associate Professor of Geosciences at Boise State University, led a team of researchers and students on an expedition down the Middle Fork of the Salmon River in August, providing quality time for the inter-disciplinary team to debate the current research and brainstorm future directions.
Idaho Plays a Lead Role in New Northwest Regional Climate Science Center The resources of the current Idaho EPSCoR Research Infrastructure Improvement Award were used to strengthen the successful proposal for the Northwest Regional Climate Science Center. The University of Idaho, Oregon State University and the University of Washington received a $3.6 million, 5 year grant to establish the Center’s core functions. An additional $2-3 million per year will help fund the Center’s science projects. The Center was created through funding from the Department of Interior, and is a partner to the US Geological Survey’s National Climate Change and Wildlife Science Center.
Stakeholders from throughout the region will help set the Center’s science priorities. The Center’s science agenda is taking shape and will likely focus on:
The new Center will support research and the development of applications to help natural resource managers adapt to climate change effects throughout the NW region.
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creating high resolution climate models in support of adaptation,
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integration of physical climate models with ecological, habitat and population response models,
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assessment of vulnerability and risk for biological and cultural resources, and
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forecasting changes in natural and cultural resources due to climate change.
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