Debbie Carter
907-474-5406
5/28/10

The University of Alaska Fairbanks Cooperative Extension Service is seeking public comment on a draft plan that will guide work for the next five years.

The plan outlines goals, objectives and strategies in six areas: energy, health, food safety and security, economic development, climate change, and youth, family and community. It is linked from Extension’s home page at www.uaf.edu/ces. Comments may be made through a link on the site. The deadline for comments is June 15.

In addition to hundreds of comments received from Alaskans, the final plan will consider the results of a statewide poll conducted by Dittman Research and Communications Corp. The random-sample poll gathered information on issues of importance to Alaskans, public knowledge of Extension and the best methods to reach clients.

Extension director Fred Schlutt says he hopes the strategic plan will provide a blueprint for how Extension can be most helpful to Alaskans.

Extension is part of a nationwide education network supported by a partnership between the U.S. Department of Agriculture and land grant universities such as the University of Alaska Fairbanks. It provides fact-based, practical information to Alaskans on many topics, ranging from energy conservation and gardening to wood stove safety and making sauerkraut. Its 4-H program reaches more than 13,000 Alaska youths every year.
Extension district offices are located in Fairbanks, Delta, Anchorage, Palmer, Soldotna, Bethel, Nome, Juneau and Sitka. For more information, call toll-free, 877-520-5211.

ON THE WEB: www.uaf.edu/ces

DC/5-28-10/241-10

Posted by Marmian Grimes On May - 28 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Wildfire

UAF photo by Todd Paris
A controlled burn designed to allow researchers a better understanding of wildfire behavior works its way through a 250-acre plot in the Tanana Valley State Forest about 35 miles southwest of Fairbanks.


Nancy Tarnai
907-474-5042
5/28/10

A new $435,000 grant from the federal Joint Fire Science Program will create a University of Alaska Fairbanks program to help make fire science research more accessible to fire and land managers.

The two-year grant will establish the Alaska Fire Science Consortium, one of eight regional fire science consortiums recently created around the nation.

“This will be a hub for fire science information in Alaska,” said Sarah Trainor, project leader and stakeholder liaison for the UAF Scenarios Network for Alaska Planning. “It will enhance communications between fire science managers and make the research more applicable and useful to people on the ground.”

The consortium will help coordinate information between fire agencies and disseminate the results of northern latitude and boreal forest fire science to fire managers. Trainorʼs goals are to host on-site field workshops and an annual statewide workshop, which is set for this October in Anchorage. The consortium will also produce a newsletter and fact sheets, set up statewide fire science teleconferences and webinars, host a fire science help desk and develop innovative fire prediction tools.

Consortium partners include the UAF School of Natural Resources and Agricultural Sciences, the Alaska Center for Climate Assessment and Policy, the Bureau of Land Management-Alaska Fire Service, the National Park Service, the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, and BLM Lands.

ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: Sarah Trainor, SNAP stakeholder liaison, 907-474-7878,
[email protected]. Scott Rupp, SNAP director, 907-474-7535, [email protected].

NT/5-28-10/242-10

Posted by Marmian Grimes On May - 28 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Shelbie Umphenour
907-474-2417
5/27/10

The University of Alaska Fairbanks art department will hold a silent art auction Friday, May 28 from 6-8 p.m. in the UAF art gallery in the Fine Arts Complex.

The auction will feature ceramics created and donated specifically for this event. All proceeds will benefit the Tom Rohr Memorial Scholarship fund.

For more information on the auction, contact the UAF art department at 907-474-7530 or [email protected].

MEDIA CONTACT: Shelbie Umphenour, public information officer, at 907-474-2417 or via e-mail at [email protected].

SCU/5-27-10/240psa-10

Posted by Pat Cruse On May - 28 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS
Campus flower planting

UAF photo by Todd Paris
Jim Matthews with the Fairbanks Host Lions Club volunteers during Flower Planting Day on the Fairbanks campus.

Marmian Grimes
907-474-7902
5/27/10

Members of the Fairbanks and University of Alaska Fairbanks communities are invited to grab their favorite pair of garden gloves and lend a hand during the 16th annual campus flower planting Wednesday, June 2 from 9 a.m. to noon.

Parking is free in the Nenana lot across from the Patty Center. Ride the flower shuttle and check in outside Constitution Hall. Breakfast goodies will be served at the sign-in tables.

For more information, contact Cheri Renson, UAF events coordinator, at 907-474-5114 or via e-mail at [email protected].

MEDIA CONTACT: Marmian Grimes, UAF public information officer, at 907-474-7902 or via e-mail at [email protected].

AC/5-27-10/239psa-10

Posted by Pat Cruse On May - 27 - 2010 2 COMMENTS

By Andrew Sheeler, UAF Sun Star reporter

It was the first week of May. The spring semester was drawing to an end and graduating students were counting down the days before they would be receiving their degrees. Summer had almost arrived and the trees weren’t the only things covered in green. The UAF campus had been covered with bright green flyers detailing a list of grievances against Tom Albanese, UAF alum, CEO of Rio Tinto, and the man chosen to give the commencement address to the 2010 UAF graduates.

Read more …

Posted by Marmian Grimes On May - 27 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS
Terry Chapin

Erica Franich
907-474-7588
5/26/10

UAF Summer Sessions & Lifelong Learning will promote sustainability with a series of lectures this summer.

The “Discover a Sustainable Alaska” lecture series features a new speaker and green topic each Wednesday from June 9th to July 7th. Lectures cover topics such as Alaska’s ecosystems and sustainability in garden systems.

All lectures are held at 7 p.m. in Schaible Auditorium on the University of Alaska Fairbanks campus. For information and a schedule of lectures, call 907-474-7021 or visit www.uaf.edu/summer.

MEDIA CONTACT:
Erica Franich, Summer Sessions public information officer, at 907-474-7588 or via e-mail at [email protected].

ON THE WEB: http://www.uaf.edu/summer/special-events/lectures/discovering-alaska/

ELF/5-26-10/237psa-10

Posted by Pat Cruse On May - 27 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Gardener

Photo by Edwin Remsberg
Laurel McManus tends plants in a Nenana garden.


Debbie Carter
907-474-5406
5/25/10

The Cooperative Extension Service in Fairbanks invites residents to bring a brown bag lunch and their questions to a free lecture series on gardening topics.

The series kicks off Friday with information on soil testing. Sessions will run from 12:10 – 12:50 p.m. most Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays through July 16 in Room 108 of the University Park Building at 1000 University Ave. Extension agriculture and horticulture agent Michele Hebert or a member of her staff will lead the sessions. A schedule follows:

May 28 — soil testing
June 2 — worm composting in a tote (sign up in advance to take home a box)
June 4 — growing baby salad greens
June 7 — raising tomatoes
June 9 — growing strawberries
June 11 — growing raspberries
June 14 — edible flowers
June 16 — square foot gardening
June 18 — lasagna gardening
June 21 — lawn establishment
June 23 — rejuvenating your lawn
June 25 — maintaining your lawn
June 28 — compost tea
June 30 — invasive weeds
July 7 — compost tea
July 9 — tree pests
July 12 — common garden pests
July 14 — perennial garden
July 16 — transplanting trees

For more information or to sign up for the June 2 class, contact Taylor Maida at 907-474-2422 or [email protected].

ON THE WEB: www.uaf.edu/ces

DC/5-24-10/236-10

Posted by Pat Cruse On May - 27 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Erica Franich
907-474-7588
5/25/10

Neil Davis

Photo courtesy of Neil Davis.
UAF Summer Sessions will host

Scientist and author Neil Davis will share stories of his life and expansive career during a free public event Monday, June 7 at 7 p.m. in the Davis Concert Hall on the University of Alaska Fairbanks campus.

During the event, Davis and interviewer Robert Hannon will discuss a wide variety of topics that encapsulate Davis’ many contributions to the University of Alaska, the people of Alaska and various fields of science. “An Evening with Neil Davis” is the 2010 UAF Legacy Lecture and is part of an annual lecture series presented by UAF Summer Sessions & Lifelong Learning.

Davis earned both his bachelor’s and doctoral degrees at UAF. He is a professor emeritus at UAF, having spent more than two decades as a member of the faculty. He served in a variety of positions, including director of the Geophysical Institute. He was a key player in the creation of the Poker Flat Research Range. The T. Neil Davis Optical Science Operations Center at the range is named in his honor. Davis retired from UAF in 1981.  During his career, he also served as a research associate and aerospace technologist for NASA.

Davis became well-known locally by authoring the Community Science Forum, a regular science newspaper column in the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner from 1975-1981. In 1982, a collection of 400 of the columns was published in the book “Alaska Science Nuggets.” Davis is also the author of multiple fiction and nonfiction books on topics such as permafrost, aurora borealis and health care.

ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: Erica Franich, UAF public information officer, at 907-474-7588 or via e-mail at [email protected].

ON THE WEB: www.uaf.edu/summer/special-events/lectures/

EF/5-25-10/235-10

Posted by Pat Cruse On May - 26 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS
murrelet

Photo by Alyson McNight, courtesy of U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
A juvenile Kittletz's murrelet, caught on the water of Kachemak Bay, Alaska.

Ned Rozell
907-474-7468
5/24/10

While hiking the rocky high country on one of the westernmost islands in Alaska a few years ago, Robb Kaler stumbled onto a birder¹s dream. Walking around a knee-high volcanic boulder, Kaler flushed a plump little seabird. The bird bounced off a rock and disappeared into the fog. Kaler looked down and saw a turquoise egg in a shallow cup of tundra.

“I knew it was something great,” Kaler said.

Kaler had stumbled upon a bird, the Kittlitz’s murrelet, so elusive that biologists had during the last century written about finding nests just two dozen times. The secretive little bird had become a symbol of species threatened by shrinking glaciers.

The discovery was just the beginning for Kaler, a biologist who was studying a species of ptarmigan on the island for the Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge. When he and his field assistant and partner Leah Kenney combed the higher spots of the 55,535-acre island for Kittlitz’s murrelet nests, they found 11 in 2006, 17 the year after that, and 14 nests last year.

“They’re a tremendous find,” said John Piatt, a biologist with the USGS Alaska Science Center in Anchorage who has studied murrelets since the 1980s. “When he found (the 11 nests in 2006), our jaws dropped. Up to that point, people had found only about 20 nests, and almost all of them were accidental finds where they just flushed a bird when they were looking for something else.”

About 90 percent of the world’s Kittlitz’s murrelets live around glaciers in Icy Bay, Glacier Bay and Prince William Sound, perhaps attracted by the oily capelin fish that thrive where cold glacial waters enter the ocean. Researcher Kathy Kuletz wrote a report for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in 2004 in which she mentioned an 84 percent decrease in the birds in Prince William Sound since the 1970s, and similar decreases in Kenai Fjords and near Malaspina Glacier. She mentioned a possible tie between the retreat of tidewater glaciers and the decline of the birds.

The Kittlitz’s murrelets on Agattu, in the Aleutians, so far from other populations of the birds, are a bit of a head-scratcher for scientists.

“It’s an interesting remote outpost,” Piatt said of Agattu. “They may even be a different species that looks like the others but is genetically different.”

Across Alaska, the birds have a curious tendency to nest high in mountains near the ocean, which is perhaps a strategy to avoid foxes and nest-raiding birds.

“To find safe ground from predators, you have to go up,” Piatt said.

“Their habitat is so hard to access,” Kaler said while in Homer waiting to ship out to Agattu for the summer to continue studying the rare murrelets. “(Finding a nest is) like finding a needle in a haystack.”

Biologists have also recently found a few nests on the west coast of Kodiak Island, which along with the Agattu birds, counters the notion that the Kittlitz’s murrelet needs glaciers to survive.

“The western Aleutian population suggests that maybe they can persist without glaciers,” Kaler said. “We’re finding a population of breeding Kittlitz’s murrelets where there hasn’t been a glacier in 10,000 years.”

This summer, Kaler returns to what will become he and Kenney’s own personal island to focus on the birds’ chicks and to try and find out more about what Juneau biologist Michelle Kissling called “one of the rarest and least understood seabirds in the world.”

They will try to find out why many of the Kittlitz’s murrelets chicks don’t survive to be adults, a problem at Agattu and elsewhere. Kaler has found that less than one egg out of every 10 laid by Agattu birds produces a chick that leaves the nest.

“They’re declining throughout their range rather dramatically. Why is this?” Piatt said. “We think their feeding might be poor. The chicks (at Agattu) are skinny little runts.”

This column is provided as a public service by the Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska Fairbanks, in cooperation with the UAF research community. Ned Rozell is a science writer at the institute. To subscribe, send an e-mail to [email protected]

Posted by Andrew Cassel On May - 25 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Diana Campbell
907-474-5221
5/24/10

A Tuesday, May 25 lecture at the University of Alaska Fairbanks will examine why minority populations in the United States have an unusually high risk of stroke, diabetes and heart problems.

Columbia University assistant professor Bernadette Boden-Albala will present her findings in a free public lecture “Race and Ethnicity Influences on Metabolic Syndrome: Cultural and Biological Perspectives.”

The lecture will begin at 2:30 p.m. in the Elvey Globe Room. It is sponsored by the Center for Alaska Native Health Research.

MEDIA CONTACT: Diana Campbell, CANHR communication specialist, at 907-474-5221 or via e-mail at [email protected].

ON THE WEB:
canhr.uaf.edu
http://alaskastroke.com/

DC/5-24-10/234psa-10

Posted by Pat Cruse On May - 25 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Sun Star

KUAC

KSUA

  • Listen to KSUA-FM Online

FIND STORIES ABOUT

POPULAR STORIES