The Toledo Blade Online
The Toledo Blade OnlineThe Toledo Blade Green Edition
Click here to subscribe or renew!
Temp: 38°
Humidity: 96%
Monday, 11/23/09
Home »   Latest News »   Blade Area » 

Click to Receive RSS Feeds!EmailPrint IndexHelp FacebookMySpaceDiggDel.icio.usFark

Article published May 18, 2009
Meeting on lakes spotlights UT's gains
Top U.S., Canadian scientists to attend



To the layman, a conference being held at the University of Toledo this week may appear to be just the latest in a confusing collection of Great Lakes events.

But to those who intimately track the science behind the Earth's largest source of fresh surface water, this week's International Association of Great Lakes Research conference says a lot about UT's ambition to become an academic powerhouse for environmental studies.

It also illustrates how much more value northwest Ohio has started to place on the environment after years of neglect, from more fish and algae research to being reinvigorated - with the university's help - by solar power and other forms of alternative energy that can help the lakes, officials said.

Carol Stepien, the conference chairman and director of UT's Lake Erie Center on Bayshore Road in Oregon, said the conference is like landing the Super Bowl of Great Lakes research.

Some 650 people, including many of the top Great Lakes scientists in the United States and Canada, are expected to attend. At least 538 scientific papers are to be presented, in addition to public forums, field trips, and even a little fun around town that can provide a short-term boost to the local economy.

"It's certainly going to put Toledo on the map," said Frank Lichtkoppler, an Ohio Sea Grant extension agent and professor. "For that week, the center of Great Lakes science is Toledo."

2 PUBLIC EVENTS MONDAY ARE FREE
Fees are required for attending the International Association of Great Lakes Research conference, but two
events today are free of charge and open to the public.
Both are in the University of Toledo’s Student Union,
where most of the conference is being held:

• A Great Lakes stakeholder meeting sponsored by the U.S. Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease
Registry, a sister agency for the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Though not a formal part of the program, the agency is
holding its event from 1 to 5 p.m.

• A Great Lakes public forum sponsored by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, from 3 to 5:30 p.m., which is on the conference agenda. Attendees will be asked for their vision of the lakes over
the next 25 years. RSVP Jennifer Day, NOAA Great
Lakes regional coordinator, at Jennifer.Day@noaa.gov
or 734-741-2266.
The conference is in its 52nd year, but has never been held in Toledo.

It is one of the Great Lakes region's three major international gatherings that occur once every two years, and the one that has the greatest emphasis on science. The U.S.-Canada International Joint Commission's biennial and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's State of the Lakes Ecosystem Conference are the other two, both weaving in more public policy.

"It's a tremendous opportunity and showcase event for us," Ms. Stepien said.

This is only the fourth time the conference has been in Ohio.

Ohio State University was host to it in 1973 and 1981, and Case Western Reserve University was host in 1999.

At first glance, it appears surprising that Toledo had not been the host.

Western Lake Erie is the warmest, shallowest, and most biologically productive part of the Great Lakes.

More fish are spawned in this area of the Great Lakes than in the other lakes combined, with the Maumee River - the largest inland tributary that flows into a Great Lake - serving as one of the region's top nursery grounds.

The Toledo area also represents a confluence of many issues.

Those include how millions of people between Detroit and Cleveland use the shoreline, how automobile manufacturers, oil refineries, power plants, and other types of heavy industry have affected the lakes, and how tourism, recreation, shipping, and agriculture fit into the mix.

Daryl Moorhead, a conference co-chairman and UT environmental sciences professor, said Toledo "really sits on the aorta of the Great Lakes."

Many ecological changes, from the impact of zebra mussels to the proliferation of toxic forms of algae, often rear their heads first in western Lake Erie because of its ecological conditions, he said.

But he said it's probably no accident Toledo never played host to the conference before now.

Environmental studies did not become one of UT's priorities until the early 1990s, he said.

Flashback to the 1970s:

Even after the first Earth Day, the march on Washington by those who demanded a cleaner environment and the movement that ultimately resulted in the creation, in the current era, of pollution laws, UT had only two faculty members who focused on environmental studies.

Today, it has an environmental studies department of 22 faculty members. It also has four or five environmental engineers and professors in disciplines as far-reaching as philosophy and women and gender issues who specialize in the environment. It has another faculty member versed in environmental policy and recently hired someone whose expertise is in environmental economics, Mr. Moorhead said.

The environmental sciences and public health departments also provide a special program at UT's medical school, the former Medical College of Ohio.

UT's law school also has its own Great Lakes legal institute.

"This is truly a broadly based initiative at the University of Toledo," Mr. Moorhead said.

He said the momentum began after U.S. Rep. Marcy Kaptur (D., Toledo) secured funding for the $7 million Lake Erie Center, one of the only laboratories where lake water is pumped directly through a laboratory for real-time research. It was dedicated in 1998, although it opened to researchers well before that.

"Until that time, it really didn't make that much sense to host a meeting. We didn't have the scientists," Mr. Moorhead said.

"We've literally exploded onto the Great Lakes program."

Ms. Stepien, a member of the research association's board from 2004 to 2008, said she made it her mission to have UT host the conference when she was hired to be the Lake Erie Center's second director in 2004.

She said she organized the event with the help of a 30-member planning committee.

UT is submitting 50 of the 500-plus scientific papers at the conference, the most of any university, she said.

Mr. Moorhead said he left a tenured faculty job at Texas Tech University in early 1999 because of the possibilities he saw at UT with its new Lake Erie Center, as well as the federal government's renewed interest in the lakes after having "grossly ignored" them for years.

"As an ecologist, I wanted to be part of it," he said.


Permanent Link

 RECENT RELATED ARTICLES

Lakes projects get a boost | 11/03/2009
Great Lakes historic group lauds museum ship's savior | 09/12/2009
Great Lakes funds should address silt dredging, dumping | 06/14/2009
President's lakes issues aide named | 06/05/2009
Great Lakes research, laws are shifting focus | 05/26/2009

Medical/Science
Updated: 5:29 am
What's a body mass index, and is it important? >>
Blade Area
Updated: 6:54 am
Weekend in review: Most viewed stories, photo galleries, multimedia >>
Blade Area
Updated: 5:45 am
Vote on deer cull expected Monday night >>
Blade Area
Updated: 5:45 am
Vivacious centenarian knew hardship as a child >>
Blade Area
Updated: 5:44 am
Port Clinton collegian found dead >>
Nation/World
Updated: 5:43 am
Study finds heavy use of TV in home day care >>
More news stories
 



click here!

ADVERTISING SECTIONS
S. Amjad Hussain
Updated: 4:26 am
Muslims must do more than condemn acts of violence >>

Marilou Johanek
Updated: 5:58 am
In a dog's life, there's nothing to worry about >>

Jack Kelly
Updated: 6:26 am
Obama’s vendetta >>

Jack Lessenberry
Updated: 7:42 am
Dog warden coverage is public service journalism >>

Rose Russell
Updated: 6:24 am
The food you waste could feed hungry people  >>

David Shribman
Updated: 8:52 am
U.S. has much to relearn from China >>

Mike Sigov
Updated: 6:26 am
GM acted wisely by hitting brakes on Russian deal >>

Tom Walton
Updated: 4:59 am
If you're looking to go, and you just got to, then take and go >>

More columnist stories
MOST READ STORIES
1.  Port Clinton collegian found dead
2.  EastToledo industrial site soon to be ready for new life
3.  Vote on deer cull expected Monday night
4.  Vivacious centenarian knew hardship as a child
5.  Bowling Green lab's DNA policy raises questions
6.  Road Warrior: 11-23
7.  Grant to help rebuild Adrian’s Bent Oak Avenue
8.  Real estate agent heads Family Service board
9.  Wood County deputies to boost holiday patrols
10.  TARTA bus to collect items for area food bank
MOST E-MAILED STORIES
1.  BGSU plans for 2 new dormitories
2.  Buckeyes sport retro look of 1954
3.  Owens students get apology for lost accreditation
4.  Toledo fares poorly in survey
5.  Skeldon says he will step down Dec. 31, but Konop wants him dismissed immediately
6.  Ex-OSU coach Bruce instills passion for rivalry
7.  Chrysler boosts Dundee plant; engine line to gain jobs, add output
8.  Owens faculty vote no confidence in provost
9.  10 healthy puppies all put down 1 day after surrender to warden
10.  Owens failed to address shortcomings in nursing


AP  News Headlines



AP  Business Headlines



AP  Sports Headlines


AP  Features Headlines
Copyright 2009 The Blade. By using this service, you accept the terms of our privacy statement and our visitor agreement. Please read them.
The Toledo Blade Company, 541 N. Superior St., Toledo, OH 43660, (419) 724-6000
To contact a specific
department or an individual person, click here.
The Toledo Times ®