UNC Wilmington Partners with Francis Marion University to Build Biological Research Station in Ecuador
Tuesday, February 01, 2011
Construction of a biological research station in Wildsumaco
Wildlife Sanctuary on the east slope of the Andes mountains will
allow faculty and students from the University of North Carolina
Wilmington and Francis Marion University to study one of the
world's most biologically diverse regions.
Adjacent to the 12,560-foot Sumaco Volcano, the last major mountain
before reaching the Amazon basin, the sanctuary, at nearly 5,000
feet in altitude, is home to approximately 500 species of birds and
a number of rare snakes, reptiles, monkeys and jungle cats,
including the puma, margay and ocelot.
The partnership was "more or less serendipitous," said Brian
Arbogast, UNCW terrestrial conservation biologist and future
assistant director of the station. Arbogast met Travis Knowles, FMU
assistant provost, associate professor of biology and future
director of the station, when they were in graduate school at Wake
Forest University. The researchers maintained a long-time
friendship and participated together in several research-based
birding trips.
When Knowles met Jim and Bonnie Olson and Jonas Nilsson, founders
of the Wildsumaco Sanctuary, he invited Arbogast to visit the site
with him. The sanctuary, situated between two Ecuadorean villages,
was established to support birding ecotourism and forest
conservation. It is also an ideal site for scientific exploration,
which has happened much less at mid-elevation, compared to lower
elevation rainforest sites.
Although the Olsons and Nilsson operate a lodge on the property,
there was a clear need for a separate scientific research station.
Built with concrete blocks, the approximately 2,000-square-foot
station will consist of two buildings nestled in the heart of the
sanctuary: a dormitory-style housing unit with bunk beds and shared
bathrooms, with a capacity to house 18 people; and a combined
kitchen, dining and lecture-laboratory building. Accommodations
will be rustic and cost-effective, yet provide students and
scientists with features important for conducting research, such as
electricity, satellite internet and areas for storing
equipment.
"We envision it as a place where multiple cultures will meet,
including the indigenous population and faculty and students from
all over the world," Arbogast said.
The partnership supports one of UNC Wilmington's strategic goals:
to create an educational environment that prepares students to
become global citizens. While working alongside professional
scientists during summer field excursions, students will engage
with local citizens to experience the rich Ecuadorean culture.
Benefits are also multi-disciplinary, extending beyond science.
Denise DiPuccio, associate provost of international programs at
UNCW, anticipates that students from the fields of social work,
education, nursing, Spanish, art, parks and recreation and more
will be able to utilize the facility.
Some faculty and students have already begun research projects in
the area. UNCW graduate student Anne-Marie Hodge, who holds a
prestigious National Science Foundation Graduate Research
Fellowship, focuses on the carnivore population. Most specifically,
she studies the margay, a small, spotted tropical cat.
"I use non-invasive sampling techniques to study habitat selection
and activity patterns of margays and other carnivores, and to
analyze how these species affect one another's behavior," Hodge
said. "Very little is known about the margay, and I will try to
determine its habitat preferences to use for future efforts to
protect margays, which are a declining species."
Construction is underway and expected to be complete within the
year, depending on contractor schedules and weather. The facility
will be owned and operated by FMU, the lead academic institution,
but UNCW will receive priority scheduling and rates for the use of
the facility and a spot on the advisory committee for policy
development.
Media contact: Dana Fischetti, media relations manager,
910.508.3127 or fischettid@uncw.edu
Numerous photos are available of the wildlife being studied by
research faculty and students at the Wildsumaco Wildlife
Sanctuary.
For further information:
Wildsumaco Biological Station FB page:
www.facebook.com/wildsumaco.bio.station
Wildsumaco and Rio Pucuno Pages:
www.wildsumaco.com/html/whoweare.php
www.riopucunofoundation.org/
www.riopucunofoundation.org/html/projects.php
wildsumaco.com/html/sumacobirdinglodge.php

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