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biweekly update

Biweekly Update – April 3, 2019

New Announcements:

1.    Biweekly Update Submission form – Please use this form for submitting future biweekly update items. Due to staffing limitations through the summer of 2019, submissions sent through email could be missed.

2.    Piedmont Master Gardeners Through the Garden Gate – Charlottesville-Albemarle County – May 11-September 14

3.    19th Festival of Gardening – Lynchburg, VA – May 4, 2019

4.    NRV Master Gardener Plant Sale – Christiansburg, VA – May 11, 2019

a.     9 am until 3 pm

Montgomery County Government Center

755 Roanoke St.

Christiansburg, Va. 24073

5.    NRV Garden Tour – Blacksburg/Christiansburg, VA – July 6, 2019

a.     9 am until 5 pm

Featuring 7 gardens in the Blacksburg/Christiansburg area

Tickets on sale at local libraries – June 1

6.    Gardeners’ Survey – AmpleHarvest.org

7.    Visit the VCE Lawn and Garden Calendar!

8.    “The Mysteries of the Marvelous Monarch” – Charlottesville, VA – April 4, 2019

9.    2019 Tree and Shrub Identification Series – Stafford, VA – May 2-June 6, 2019

10. Suffolk Master Gardener Association Annual Spring Plant Sale – Suffolk, VA – April 27, 2019

a.     April 27, 2019

Westminster Reformed Presbyterian Church

3488 Godwin Blvd, Suffolk, VA 23434

10:00 – 2:00

11.  Nurturing Native Plants – Natural Bridge, VA – June 1, 2019

12.  NC State Extension Master Gardener College – Raleigh, NC – June 6 – 9, 2019

13. Spring Plant Sale: Nelson County Master Gardeners – Roseland, VA – May 5, 2019, Devil’s Backbone Basecamp Brewpub & Meadows, 200 Mosbys Run, Roseland, VA 22967

a.     “The Master Gardeners of Nelson County are having their 19th Annual Spring Plant Sale on Sunday May 5th. We think you’ll agree that it’s worth the drive down scenic 151 to peruse | shop the wide selection of plants. While here, we invite you to stroll through our Pollinator Garden located on the Devil’s Backbone premises. Our plant sale flyer is attached to this message. Hope to see you on May 5th

14.  Norfolk EMG Plant Sale – “Join Norfolk Master Gardeners on May 18-19 at the Stockley Gardens Arts Festival for our annual Plant Sale!”

April Announcements:

15.  Horticultural Horizons – Chesterfield County, VA – April 30, 2019

a.     Registration Form

16.  Mid-Atlantic Garden Faire – Abingdon, VA – April 19 & 20

a.     See www.gardenfaire.net for details

17.  Spring Symposium: Wild about Natives – Fredericksburg, VA – April 13, 2019

18.  2019 New Mini-Grant Application Guidelines – due April 26, 2019

a.     Please talk to your Agent or Coordinator directly if you are interested in looking at these grants.

19.  Chesapeake Master Gardener Volunteers’ 2019 Annual Plant Sale – Chesapeake, VA – April 26-27, 2019

20.  2019 Sustainable Urban Agriculture Certificate Program – March 9-June 1, 2019

21. Extension Good and Bad bugs webinar series – Feb 1 – Dec 6, 2019

a.     https://articles.extension.org/pages/74786/2019-all-bugs-good-and-bad-webinar-series

22.  2019 Sustainable Urban Agriculture Certificate Program – March 9-June 1, 2019

23. Goochland Powhatan Master Gardeners Association 15th Annual Spring Garden Fest – April 27th, 2019

a.     “Not only is the event a fun, free festival, but attendees can also participate in a full day of classes and tours for a one-time $20 registration fee. Classes, tours, and workshops fill up quickly, so register early for the best selection.  Complete descriptions and online registration is available at https://www.gpmga.org/spring-garden-fest/”  

24. 4th Virginia Urban Agriculture Summit – Virginia Beach, VA – April 23-25

25. 2019 Virginia Agritourism Conference – Hotel Roanoke – Roanoke, VA – Wednesday, April 3, and Thursday, April 4, 2019

a.     More info

b.    Register online select the 2019 conference

26.   4th Virginia Urban Agriculture Summit Call for Abstracts

 

May Announcements:

27.  VMGA Education Day at Virginia Western Community College – Roanoke, VA – May 4, 2019 – Deadline for registration is April 24th 9am-4pm – $18 VMGA members, $33 non-members

28.  Piedmont Master Gardeners and Charlottesville Area Tree Stewards Annual Sale – Charlottesville, VA – May 4, 2019

a.     Flyer: Click Here!

29. Western Tidewater Master Gardeners Plant Sale  – Carrollton, VA – May 4, 2019 – 9am – 1pm

 

June Announcements:

30.  Monticello | UVA 23rd Annual Historic Landscape Institute, “Preserving Jefferson’s Gardens and Landscapes” – June 23-28, 2019

a.     This one-week course uses Monticello and the University of Virginia as outdoor classrooms to study historic landscape preservation.

b.    https://www.monticello.org/sites/default/files/HLI2019Flyer.edit_.pdf

31. Are you attending International Master Gardener College 2019 in Valley Forge, PA June 17-21? Let VMGA know!

 

July Announcements:

32.  Cullowhee Native Plant Conference – Western Carolina University – July 17-20, 2019

 

October Announcements:

33. Save the Date: Protecting Pollinators in Urban Landscapes – Cincinnati, Ohio – October 7-9, 2019

Other Announcements:

34. Follow the State Office on social media:

·      Facebook

·      Instagram

·      YouTube

35. Save the date for 2019 Master Gardener College!

September 19-22, 2019, Norfolk, Virginia

36. . Resources for fertilization of lawns and for those involved with Healthy Virginia Lawns programming  

37. Do you have questions coming in to your Extension Master Gardener program and need to find some answers? Extension Search Resources for EMG Questions

38. Registration now open for online Plant Identification Classes by Longwood Gardens and NC State – Click Here

39. Master Gardener College Updates:

b)    Room block information available! Book your room at The Main now! View our registration information page for more information on booking your accommodations (scroll down to “Accommodation Costs”).

40. An update from National Initiative for Consumer Horticulture: 2018 accomplishments letter

41. Every Kid in a Park Program

c)    Information from Chad Proudfoot, 4H“The program is very simple: every 4th grade student (or home school equivalent) in the United States is entitled to get one Every Kid in a Park pass which lasts through August 31 of the school year.” 

Categories
Climate Change Global Change Ideas New Publications News

Ancient ‘Snowball Earth’ thawed out in a flash

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]From Sciencemag.org

BY LUCAS JOEL | April 2, 2019

More than half a billion years ago, our planet was a giant snowball hurtling through space. Glaciers blanketed the globe all the way to the equator in one of the mysterious “Snowball Earth” events geologists think occurred at least twice in Earth’s ancient past. Now, scientists have found that the final snowball episode likely ended in a flash about 635 million years ago—a geologically fast event that may have implications for today’s human-driven global warming.

The ice, which built up over several thousand years, “melted in no more than 1 million years,” says Shuhai Xiao, a paleobiologist at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in Blacksburg who was part of the team that made the discovery. That’s the blink of an eye in our planet’s 4.56-billion-year history, suggesting the globe reached a sudden tipping point, Xiao says. Although the  team doesn’t know for certain what caused it, carbon dioxide emitted by ancient volcanoes may have triggered a greenhouse event, causing the ice sheets to thaw rapidly.

To shine light on the pace of deglaciation, Xiao and colleagues dated volcanic rocks from southern China’s Yunnan province. These were embedded below another kind of rock called a cap carbonate—unique deposits of limestone and dolostone that formed during Snowball Earth’s shutdown in response to high levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Using radiometric dating techniques, the team found the volcanic rocks were 634.6 million years old, give or take about 880,000 years. Alone, this single new date couldn’t reveal the speed at which the melting happened. But in 2005, a different team of scientists dated volcanic rocks from above a similar cap at a different location—in China’s Guizhou province. They were dated to 635.2 million years, give or take 570,000 years.

Together, the two samples suggest the melting event was a quick thaw of about 1 million years, Xiao and his colleagues wrote last month in Geology. The key, Xiao explains, is that these two dates are far more precise than those of past samples, with error bars of less than 1 million years. Those error bars essentially bracket the period in which the cap carbonates formed—and, thus, bound the period of the final Snowball Earth thawing event. Because previously discovered samples have error bars of several million years or more, Xiao says these new dates are the first that can be used to calculate the pace of melting with any certainty.

However, because the two new samples come from southern China, they don’t paint a global picture of the ancient thaw, says Carol Dehler, a geologist at Utah State University in Logan. To do that, scientists would need to find datable volcanic rocks from other parts of the world, which are about “as common as unicorns,” she jokes. But, she adds, they might be out there “waiting to be discovered.”

Meanwhile, understanding the nature of these ancient glaciations could help scientists dealing with climate change today: “I think one of the biggest messages that Snowball Earth can send humanity,” Dehler says, “is that it shows the Earth’s capabilities to change in extreme ways on short and longer time scales.”

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Categories
Accolades Blog News

Dr. Hopkins presents Interdisciplinary Graduate Education initiatives to VT’s Board of Visitors

Bill Hopkins had the opportunity to brief the Virginia Tech Board of Visitors on April 1, 2019 about Interdisciplinary Graduate Education initiatives at Virginia Tech.  He used his experience directing the Interfaces of Global Change IGEP to discuss how these programs benefit the University, including their impact on achieving our land grant mission, as well as their positive influence on student recruitment and the research enterprise.  This is the third time Bill has addressed the BOV over the last few years; previous discussions centered on The Global Change Center and the provost’s initiative focused on Global Systems Science.

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Categories
Conservation Ideas New Publications Research

Researchers use high-powered computer simulations to study reintroduction of bull trout

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From VT News

March 27, 2019

A multi-institutional team of researchers, led by Meryl Mims, has assessed how environmental, demographic, and genetic factors play a role in the reintroduction of bull trout in Washington State.

Their project is one of the first to use an advanced computer model to simulate the genetic and demographic outcomes of the reintroduction by projecting 200 years into the future.

“This is a study that was really driven by a policy need to understand how management actions might influence a species in the future and what the range of outcomes would look like,” said Mims, an assistant professor in the Department of Biological Sciences in the College of Science. “This was a unique opportunity to use computer simulations to understand how a species – in this case, bull trout – may respond to changes in its habitat.”

Their collaborative work was published in Ecosphere in February and has been five years in the making.

The reintroduction of species can be expensive and resource-intensive, and is not always successful, either. Due to declining or extirpated populations, in part because of habitat fragmentation, the bull trout, Salvelinus confluentus, was listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act in 1999. The species’ natural range extends from the Pacific Northwest to western Canada.

Mims and her team developed a framework to evaluate the reintroduction of aquatic species, focusing their efforts on the spatial, demographic, and genetic factors of reintroducing the bull trout to three watersheds of the Pend Oreille River system in northeastern Washington State.

“It was extremely encouraging for me to be part of this collaboration where stakeholders, scientists, and managers were willing to share data and really support this effort, which was driven by everyone wanting the best available science,” said Mims, an affiliated faculty member of the Global Change Center, housed within the Fralin Life Science Institute.

There are five hydroelectric dams on the Pend Oreille River between the U.S. and Canada. Downstream of the study system, the 340-foot Boundary Dam generates approximately 46 percent of the power produced by Seattle City Light. However, the dams can create major disturbances as aquatic species are unable to make their way upstream and past dams. For many species, movement is critical to their life history.

Bull trout persist in metapopulations – groups of the same species separated by space. Movement of individuals between populations is critical to the persistence of metapopulations. Local extinction can occur in an area due to a multitude of reasons, but the recolonization of unoccupied patches is important for the persistence of the species. Dams and culverts threaten the ecosystem’s connectivity by isolating populations and reducing the likelihood of recolonizations.

Dam on river
The Mill Pond Dam in 2014. Photo courtesy of Meryl Mims.

Erin Landguth, a computer scientist at the University Montana studying how wildlife populations interact with the landscape, created CDMetaPOP to understand the complexities of how species such as bull trout interact with their landscapes. The team used a wide variety of parameters, including demographic information, vital rates, a map of the landscape, empirical genetic data, and movement data to project bull trout populations 200 years into the future.

“One of the powerful things with a simulation like this is that, for many reasons, we often cannot do empirical studies where we are able to validate the studies on the ground,” Mims said. “We’re interested not only in how things are responding in the next decade or two, but also in the probability of long-term persistence.”

The simulation gave insight as to what needs to be done for a successful reintroduction of bull trout. The researchers asked: If a reintroduction were to take place, is there a difference in repopulating with a genetically diverse or a similar group of trout? By tracking neutral genetic variation, the team found that the original genetic stock is not significant when studying 200 years into the future. The key to persistence, they found, is connectivity and the availability of habitat. The metapopulation structure allows for bull trout to access unoccupied patches. As a result, sufficient movement of genes between populations, called gene flow, is likely to maintain genetic variation.

“With what we know about the species, given its biology and the inputs that we provided for the model, there are scenarios in which the species will persist so long as connectivity is sufficiently high in the system. The river system looks like a good place to potentially reintroduce the species,” Mims said. “That was really encouraging.”

The study system is already seeing major changes. Improvements include removal of barriers, such as Mill Pond Dam in 2018, and adding fish passages to dams and culverts to allow for upstream movement and to control non-native species that compete with or prey on native wildlife. Many of these improvements and changes are in response to requirements by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to relicense big hydroelectric dams, like the Boundary Dam, owned and operated by Seattle City Light utility company.

“CDMetaPOP is already being used for other species and applied wildlife management questions – not just in freshwater ecosystems, but for terrestrial species, as well. I expect that these types of approaches, and CDMetaPOP in general, will continue to be extremely valuable tools,” Mims said.

However, simulations need reliable data as inputs. For many species, not enough is known about their natural history to be able to develop a complex simulation.

Mims is still in collaboration with her team, and they plan to continue their research to further understand the specifics of connectivity, its long-term implications, and the effects of fish being able to move freely through dams and culverts.

Researchers are also interested in the challenges brought on by climate change. As temperatures increase due to climate change, aquatic species tend to move upstream to cooler waters. With dams and culverts preventing them from doing so, aquatic species are unable to access these cool water locations which would support their populations. This can pose further problems for the decline of species and their possible reintroduction.

This research is an example of a successful, multiyear collaboration. Mims met her co-authors through the Landscape Genetics Distributed Graduate Seminar as a graduate student, and they have since developed this collaboration to engage stakeholders, Seattle City Light, federal agencies, and graduate students. Seattle City Light and West Fork Environmental provided field data, while the Kalispel Tribe, indigenous to the area, collected genetic samples.

— Written by Rasha Aridi

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