HomeLink
logo
              cclighthouseschool.org/abt/news/060503.php

In the News

From the May 3, 2006 Issue of The Cape Cod Times

Buzzing about the BioBlitz

By E. VERNON LAUX
CONTRIBUTING WRITER

BREWSTER - The Cape Cod Museum of Natural History yesterday played host to a group of national researchers, educators and experts in a variety of biological disciplines.

They were on hand to conduct a demonstration BioBlitz, a tool for biodiversity exploration, education and investigation.

The goal: Organize the natural history talents of the top scientists and naturalists living within urban centers to document the biodiversity present at their back door.

Not just the trees, flowers, lichens, birds, flies, beetles, butterflies, bees, crabs or fish - everything.

The distribution, occurrence and patterns of plants and animals are nowhere completely documented on Earth.

The BioBlitz is a first step toward closing that gap. Informal in organization, it can be molded by the sponsoring group to fit the circumstances and talent pool of the region

A successful BioBlitz can provide baseline data to inform residents about biologically diverse areas and identify important trends.

Many museums, natural history societies, universities and communities want to know what biological life is present and how common it is (to quantify it) on local parcels of land. Often, many towns have no information about the most basic distribution of plants and animals in their area.

BioBlitz facts

  • The BioBlitz came about because of Dr. Edward O. Wilson, who coined the term biodiversity. Wilson, a giant in biology, Harvard professor, ant expert, winner of two Pulitzer prizes and a concerned scientist, worried about the health of the planet and how to share his concern with others. He and naturalist/author Peter Alden together orchestrated and conducted the first Biodiversity Day in Concord less than a decade ago.
  • A new foundation will be unveiled during the Central Park BioBlitz in New York City on June 23 and 24. It will be called the E.O. Wilson Biodiversity Foundation, and will be an agent for positive environmental and, hence, economic change, as the two go hand-in-hand, especially in impoverished countries, around the planet.
Yesterday's Biodiversity Day drew experts on birds, insects, global-positioning system mapping, mammals, marine invertebrates and plants.

They spent the morning in the field, despite the damp, chilly weather. More than 100 participants were mobilized into roving teams - each with a special expertise - that went afield from 9 a.m. until noon.

Each field team was comprised of a scientist/expert, naturalist, a cyber tracker - the person who carried and operated a hand-held device that recorded sightings and GPS coordinates that sent them electronically to home base at BioBlitz central - a student recorder for the naturalist, a student runner to deliver data to BioBlitz central and a photographer.

The program can be likened to an environmental rapid-response identification S.W.A.T. team.

This, fortuitously, was not a full-blown BioBlitz, as the weather and temperatures would have badly skewed the effort and results.

The event was organized by Maureen McConnell and Bud Ferris of the Boston Museum of Science and the Cape Cod Museum of Natural History.

Peter Trull, a science teacher at the Lighthouse Charter School in Orleans, accompanied 16 students from grades 6 through 8 to the museum. Trull noted how ''proud he was of all his kids'' as they relished the opportunity to engage in field work.

Rachel Lake, 12, of Orleans, said she ''loved learning about the animals,'' as she returned on a trail to headquarters.

The students impressed the visitors, as well as museum volunteers, with their enthusiasm, knowledge and field skills.

(Published: May 3, 2006)