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	<title>Eagle Hill Blog</title>
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		<title>Lots of Learning About Little Lichens</title>
		<link>http://blog.eaglehill.us/2009/08/lots-of-learning-about-little-lichens/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.eaglehill.us/2009/08/lots-of-learning-about-little-lichens/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 24 Aug 2009 13:39:48 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>The Humboldt Field Research Institute, at Eagle Hill in Steuben, has a long history of studying lichens (organisms that consist of a symbiotic association of a fungus and alga). They grow in some of the most extreme environments, from arctic&#8230;</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Humboldt Field Research Institute, at Eagle Hill in Steuben, has a long history of studying lichens (organisms that consist of a symbiotic association of a fungus and alga). They grow in some of the most extreme environments, from arctic tundra to hot deserts, and even on the rocky coast of Maine. Some grow on trees, while others thrive on bare rock. Lichens have been used to make dyes, perfumes, and are even found in &#8220;Toms of Maine&#8221; underarm deodorant! They can also act as bio indicators in assessing the effects of air pollution and global warming.<br />
These fascinating organisms were the focus of four different seminars this summer at Eagle Hill. Participants found themselves traveling to nearby parks and refuges, and hiking the paths at Eagle Hill in search for lichens. They chipped crustos lichens from rocks, plucked the delicate foliose and fruiticose lichens from branches, and gathered squamulose from the forest floor. In the lab they peered through microscopes and dissected their collections to identify the different species.<br />
These seminars were lead by very knowledgeable instructors from the UK, Canada, and the US.<br />
The seminar, Introduction to Lichens, was instructed by Fred Olday who has taught at the University of Massachusetts Lowell and at College of the Atlantic in Bar Harbor, Maine.<br />
David Richardson, Professor and Dean Emeritus at Saint Mary&#8217;s University in Halifax, Nova Scotia, who is a specialist in the effects of air pollution on lichens, led the Lichens and Lichen Ecology seminar with Mark Seaward, professor Emeritus of Environmental Biology at Bradford University, England, and is also a lichen ecologist.<br />
The seminar, Lecideoid Lichens: Identification and Systematics was taught by Alan Fryday, curator of the cryptogamic collection at the Michigan State University herbarium (MSC).<br />
Irwin M. Brodo has written an encyclopedic reference book entitled &#8220;Lichens of North America&#8221; illustrated with over 920 color photographs. His seminar was Crustose Lichens of Coastal Maine.</p>
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		<title>Two Russian botanists at Eagle Hill</title>
		<link>http://blog.eaglehill.us/2009/07/two-russian-botanists-at-eagle-hill/</link>
		<comments>http://blog.eaglehill.us/2009/07/two-russian-botanists-at-eagle-hill/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 13 Jul 2009 15:01:39 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>Two Russian aquatic botanists, Alexander Bobrov and his wife Elena  Chemeris, were recently hosted by the Humboldt Field Research Institute  in Steuben. They were here with Dr. C. Barre Hellquist, Professor  Emeritus of Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts, of North&#8230;</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Two Russian aquatic botanists, Alexander Bobrov and his wife Elena  Chemeris, were recently hosted by the Humboldt Field Research Institute  in Steuben. They were here with Dr. C. Barre Hellquist, Professor  Emeritus of Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts, of North Adams,  Massachusetts, as part of an extended expedition to New England to  conduct field studies and collect aquatic plants that are similar to  those found in rivers and lakes in Russia. They were especially  interested in observing plants in the numerous acidic aquatic habitats of  eastern Maine. Dr. Hellquist took them to known sites in the region to  study pondweeds and their hybris, including the Narraguagus River and  Pushaw Lake in Oronoand even into rainy Aroostook County. During the  three weeks they were in the United States, they collected and observed  plants from as far west as Cayuga Lake in the Finger Lakes region of New  York, as far south as southern Connecticut, north throughout Vermont, New  Hampshire, and Maine. While here, they had the chance to observe and  collect 30 species of Potamogeton, and numerous Potamogeton hybrids, many  aquatic mosses, and many other species of aquatic plants both familiar  and unfamiliar to them. Alexander Bobrov and Elena Chemeris are  associated with the I.D. Papanin Institute for Biology of Inland Waters  of the Russian Academy of Sciences, in Borok, Yaroslavl District,  Russia. They both study the biology and ecology of northern Russian  Rivers north of Yarolsavl. Alexander specializes in the biology and  taxonomy of the pondweeds, Potamogeton, and their hybrids. Elena  specializes in aquatic mosses and charophytic algae.<br />
&#8211;</p>
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