Join us for the opening of Invasive Species: A Collaborative Exhibit in Mann Library! The opening events will start with a talk in Mann room 160 followed immediately by a reception in Mann Gallery on the second floor.
4-5 PM: Talk in Mann Library Room 160
Hemlock Woolly Adelgid and Other Forest Threats: Engaging Science and Art to Meet the Challenge
Exhibit lecture by Grace Haynes (New York State Hemlock Initiative), with Johannes Lehmann (Liberty Hyde Bailey Professor, School of Integrative Plant Science, Soil and Crop Sciences Section & The Soil Factory); Zoom available.
Invasive pests are a growing threat to the health of forests both in the American Northeast and other regions of the world. How can we address this critical problem effectively? In a talk presented in conjunction with the opening of Mann’s newest Gallery exhibit, “Invasive Species: A Collaborative Exhibit,” Grace Haynes of the New York State Hemlock Initiative (NYSHI) will give an overview of what is currently known about key invasive forest insect pests in the northeastern United States, focusing primarily on the devastating hemlock woolly adelgid (HWA) and its impact on our native hemlock forests. NYSHI has spent many years investigating the management of HWA, and there are important insights to share from this frontier in science. Communication and human imagination also have key roles to play in finding solutions, and Cornell professor of soil science Johannes Lehmann, a founding member of the vibrant art, science and sustainability collaboration space known as The Soil Factory in Ithaca, N.Y., will provide remarks that reflect on the new perspectives and fresh ways of engaging that emerge where science and the fine arts meet.
To attend this lecture virtually, please register here: bit.ly/3CZfpx9
5-6 PM: Reception in the Mann Gallery, Second Floor
5:15-5:30: Remarks by the contributing artists, Hovey Brock and students from Earth Projects (ENVS 3200) taught by Anna Davidson (Natural Resources & the Environment). Brock will comment on the importance of the arts as a communication tool for social engagement on the climate crisis.
This event is free and open to all. Refreshments will be served.