OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY

Departmental News

Preserving the Culture

Recreation Resource Management graduate Melinda Stewart is featured in OSU's Powered by Orange program.  She says "The advisors at the College of Forestry (Jo Tynon and Kama Luukinen) were wonderful about helping me work in the types of courses I would need in order to pursue my life’s dream.  Some terms I would read the entire course catalogue for Oregon State to find what worked into my master plan – not just into the graduation requirements."

FES Fall Seminar Series announced

The FES seminar series for Fall 2010 is starting this week!  Seminars will be held on Wednesdays from 2:00-3:00 in Richardson Hall 313.  The first speaker will be Jo Tynon on September 29, the title of her talk is "Topics and Tools for Social Science Research and Teaching".

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New Theory for Megafaunal Extinction

FES professor Bill Ripple and co-author Blaire Van Valkenburgh are featured in American Archaeology magazine.  They propose that by hunting various types of carnivores and herbivores, humans disrupted a delicate balance, triggering a collapse in the large herbivores and, ultimately, the carnivores that preyed upon them.

Joint OSU/University of Washington class wraps up in Northern Rockies

FES professor Dr. K. Norman Johnson and Dr. Jerry Franklin from University of Washington held a 2 week field class this September titled Ecosystem Restoration and Management in the Northern Rocky Mountains.  It was directed at understanding and experiencing the natural history of the forest landscapes of the Northern Rockies, the issues /challenges in natural resource conservation and management, and scientific, technical, and social approaches to addressing these issues.

Growth of biofuel industry hurt by GMO regulations

Faster development of the promising field of cellulosic biofuels – the renewable energy produced from grasses and trees – is being significantly hampered by a “deep and thorny regulatory thicket” that makes almost impossible the use of advanced gene modification methods, researchers say.  Steve Strauss, a distinguished professor of forest biotechnology in FES, was lead author of the paper.

Huge parts of world drying up due to land 'evapotranspiration': Study

A group of researchers, including FES professor Beverly Law, who are examining 'evapotranspiration' on a global basis have concluded that the soils in large areas of the Southern Hemisphere, including major portions of Australia, Africa and South America, have been drying up in the past decade.

Operational Management of Swiss Needle Cast in Douglas-fir

Dan Luoma and Keith Jayawickrama from FES are scheduled to give presentations at the upcoming workshop, Operational Management of Swiss Needle Cast in Douglas-fir.  This workshop is sponsored by The Swiss Needle Cast Cooperative, Oregon State University and Western Forestry and Conservation Association and will be held on November 17 in Woodburn, Oregon.

Related Documents: 

Legacies 44N 122S: Between the Cracks Forum

The Arts Center and OSU Music Department are partnering again this year to offer a full Between the Cracks schedule of 8 heady performances.  The season opener is on Saturday October 16th at 7 p.m. in the Main Gallery, and features FES professor John Bliss and Department Head Brenda McComb. This special performance, full of surprises, is a dedication of the H.J.Andrews Experimental Forest located in the central Cascade Range.

Lords Of Nature featured at the Salem Film Festival

The “big bad wolf” — that sinister character of scary bedtime stories — is getting a makeover. Not only do wolves and other large predators pose little threat to humans, they also play a central role in keeping ecosystems flourishing, Oregon State University researchers assert in a new film showing at the 2010 Salem Film Festival on Oct. 18. FES professors Robert Beschta and Bill Ripple will speak about their research at the festival along with the showing of the film at 5:30 p.m., Sunday, Oct. 17, at Salem Cinema, 1127 Broadway St. N.E., and again at 6:30 p.m., Monday, Oct.

Tree farmers encounter new eco-challenges

Clearcutting and poor forest management nearly two decades ago still afflict Tony and Nancy Morrow’s Clatskanie tree farm.  The retired couple bought the 56-acre property four and a half years ago, hoping to retire and harvest the land’s timber.

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