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  • Members: 95
  • Category: Ecology
  • Founded: Feb 21, 2004
  • Language: English
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#164 From: "Lisa Smith" <wildflower@...>
Date: Mon May 14, 2007 2:02 pm
Subject: FW: Publicity for Invasive Plant Conference
wildflower@...
Send Email Send Email
 
Please see the attached announcement for the MA-EPPC invasive plant
conference this August.

Lisa L. Smith
Consulting Ecologist
286 Stoneylonesome Rd.
Stahlstown, PA 15687
wildflower@...

-----Original Message-----
From: Jan McFarlan [mailto:jlm@...]
Sent: Monday, May 14, 2007 8:49 AM
To: wildflower@...
Subject: Publicity for Invasive Plant Conference

Dear Lisa,

Can you send notice of the conference to the various EPPC listserves
and the Natural Areas Association listserve?  Attached is an
announcement for the conference.

Many thanks,

Jan



Jan McFarlan, Education Coordinator
Morris Arboretum of the University of Pennsylvania
100 Northwestern Ave.
Phila., PA 19118
Ph: 215-247-5777x156
Fax: 215-247-7862
email: jlm@...


www.morrisarboretum.org

#165 From: "Lisa Smith" <wildflower@...>
Date: Fri Jun 8, 2007 4:26 pm
Subject: FW: [ma-eppc] job with invasive species duties
wildflower@...
Send Email Send Email
 

 

 

From: ma-eppc@yahoogroups.com [mailto:ma-eppc@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Phytodoer@...
Sent: Thursday, May 31, 2007 12:51 PM
To: nwinvasivespecies@...; ma-eppc@yahoogroups.com; ficmnew@...
Subject: [ma-eppc] job with invasive species duties

 

 Defenders of Wildlife is recruiting an International Associate -  will include some invasives work
See description at

http://www.defenders.org/about/jobs/international-associate.html

 

forwarded by Faith T. Campbell




See what's free at AOL.com.


#166 From: "Marc Imlay" <ialm@...>
Date: Sat Jul 14, 2007 5:31 pm
Subject: REMINDER - MA-EPPC's Invasive Plants Conf - Aug 15 and 16
ialm@...
Send Email Send Email
 

 

 

REMINDER

MA-EPPC presents our

INVASIVE PLANTS, Research, Removal and Renewal Conference

Wed Aug 15 and Thurs Aug 16, 2007

University of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA

 

The following topics will be presented: the extent of invasive plants

in the Mid-Atlantic region, the latest invasive plant control

strategies, native plants that are good alternatives to invasives,

Federal invasive plant efforts, how deer contribute to the spread of

invasive plants,new technologies to measure and monitor invasive plant

populations, how to motivate volunteers, and how native plant recovery

can prevent spread of invasive plants.

 

More details and a downloadable brochure are available at

http://www.ma-eppc.org

 

WHO SHOULD ATTEND?

Nursery and landscape professionals

Natural resource managers

State and local officials

Managers of parks, preserves and conservation districts

Invasive plant management and restoration specialists

Extension agents and environmental educators

Public and botanical garden managers

Researchers, students and gardeners

Garden and outdoor writers

Interested homeowners

Golf course and recreational land managers

YOU

 

Please distribute this message to any interested individuals or groups

you know.

 

We look forward to another great meeting this year!

 

Thank you

 

Jan Ferrigan

MA-EPPC Board President

 

 

 


#167 From: "Marc Imlay" <ialm@...>
Date: Sat Jul 14, 2007 5:31 pm
Subject: REMINDER - MA-EPPC's Invasive Plants Conf - Aug 15 and 16
ialm@...
Send Email Send Email
 

 

 

REMINDER

MA-EPPC presents our

INVASIVE PLANTS, Research, Removal and Renewal Conference

Wed Aug 15 and Thurs Aug 16, 2007

University of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA

 

The following topics will be presented: the extent of invasive plants

in the Mid-Atlantic region, the latest invasive plant control

strategies, native plants that are good alternatives to invasives,

Federal invasive plant efforts, how deer contribute to the spread of

invasive plants,new technologies to measure and monitor invasive plant

populations, how to motivate volunteers, and how native plant recovery

can prevent spread of invasive plants.

 

More details and a downloadable brochure are available at

http://www.ma-eppc.org

 

WHO SHOULD ATTEND?

Nursery and landscape professionals

Natural resource managers

State and local officials

Managers of parks, preserves and conservation districts

Invasive plant management and restoration specialists

Extension agents and environmental educators

Public and botanical garden managers

Researchers, students and gardeners

Garden and outdoor writers

Interested homeowners

Golf course and recreational land managers

YOU

 

Please distribute this message to any interested individuals or groups

you know.

 

We look forward to another great meeting this year!

 

Thank you

 

Jan Ferrigan

MA-EPPC Board President

 

 

 


#168 From: "Lisa Smith" <wildflower@...>
Date: Thu Jul 19, 2007 12:44 pm
Subject: FW: [ma-eppc] Fw: Coordinator for Institute for Invasive Species Research - job posted
wildflower@...
Send Email Send Email
 

 

 

Colleagues,

The Coordinator position for the Institute for Invasive Species Research
has been posted.

Mike Hoffman

http://www.ohr.cornell.edu/jobs/
Choose Faculty & Non Faculty Instruction, Research & Extension
positions.
Scroll down to 7/12/07 posting date and you will see the position.

--

*******************************************
Michael P. Hoffmann
Director, Cornell University Agricultural Experiment Station
http://www.cuaes.cornell.edu/CUAESWeb/home.htm
Associate Dean, College of Agriculture and Life Sciences
http://www.cals.cornell.edu/
241 Roberts Hall
Cornell University
Ithaca, NY 14853-5905
607-255-2552
FAX: 607-255-9499
EMAIL: mph3@cornell.edu
Professor, Department of Entomology
http://www.entomology.cornell.edu/Faculty_Staff/Hoffmann/


#169 From: "Lisa Smith" <wildflower@...>
Date: Mon Jul 23, 2007 11:54 pm
Subject: FW: PABIODIV: Environmental scientist position
wildflower@...
Send Email Send Email
 
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-pabiodiv@...
[mailto:owner-pabiodiv@...] On Behalf Of John Grehan
Sent: Monday, July 23, 2007 2:19 PM
To: PABIODIV@...
Subject: PABIODIV: Environmental scientist position


Buffalo Museum of Science

Employment Opportunity

Position title:  Environmental Scientist
Department:    Science and Collections
Supervisor:     Director of Science and Collections
Status:            Full time
Salary:            $35,000 to $45,000

Tifft Nature Preserve represents the Buffalo Museum of Science's
living collection of plants and animals in a unique urban ecology
comprising a recovering Brownfield with an intact wetland. These
ecological resources are used to expand public understanding and
appreciation of how plants and animals sustain the environment and
assist in the recovery of human impacted landscapes. The preserve is
used for passive recreation, educational programming, and research.
To maintain overall environmental integrity of the preserve, all
recreational, research, and educational activities must be integrated
within a scientifically informed management plan. The Environmental
Scientist will be responsible for ensuring the environmental and
management integrity of the preserve as a platform for environmental
research and programming as well as develop research and research
partners.

Specific Responsibilities:

*         Assist the Director of Science and Collections in
developing a preserve management plan

*         Carry out preserve management, habitat protection and
restoration, and other activities

*         Conduct and lead environmental management or ecological
research activities

*         Develop research or management partnerships with
universities, colleges and institutions to lead and coordinate an
environmental research program

*         Develop research and preserve management grants

*         Develop public and volunteer participation in research

*         Support and contribute to Center for Science Learning
educational programming

Priorities:

*         Tifft preserve management

*         Grant development to support research and management
programs (such as habitat restoration)

*         Research program to support education about ecological
processes affecting environmental management

*         Support and collaborate with educational programming


Qualifications:

*         At least Masters in environmental Science, ecology, or
related field. PhD preferred.


Applicant qualities:

*         Self-motivator, ability to work independently

*         Excellent communication skills - oral, written, group and
individual of all ages

*         Work well in a collaborative, team environment.

*         Committed to institutional success


Skills and Experience

*         Field Ecology or environmental management

*         Interest or background in aquatic ecology or landscape
ecology desirable.

*         Experience with invasive species management desirable.

*         Able to work with ecology of both plants and animals.

*         GIS experience helpful.


Please send application letter and cv or resume by email to:

Dr. John Grehan
Director of Science and Collections
jgrehan@...
Buffalo Museum of Science
1020 Humboldt Parkway
Buffalo, NY 14211
Phone: (716) 8965200

***************************
Dr. John R. Grehan
Director of Science and Collections
Buffalo Museum of Science 1020 Humboldt Parkway
Buffalo, NY 14211-1193
email: jgrehan@...
Phone: (716) 896-5200 ext 372

Panbiogeography

http://www.sciencebuff.org/biogeography_and_evolutionary_biology.php

Ghost moth research

http://www.sciencebuff.org/systematics_and_evolution_of_hepialdiae.php

Human evolution and the great apes

http://www.sciencebuff.org/human_origin_and_the_great_apes.php
*****

The Pennsylvania Biodiversity Listserve is intended to promote
discussion of biodiversity issues in the state.  It is moderated by
the Pennsylvania Biodiversity Partnership (PBP) following guidelines
posted at http://www.pabiodiversity.org/listserve.html.  The opinions
expressed in messages are those of the authors and NOT the PBP.  To
unsubscribe, send the message UNSUBSCRIBE PABIODIV to
majordomo@....

*****

#170 From: "Lisa Smith" <wildflower@...>
Date: Wed Aug 8, 2007 4:58 pm
Subject: FW: Vacancy - BLM Deputy State Director, Resources - GS-340-14
wildflower@...
Send Email Send Email
 
Lisa L. Smith
Consulting Ecologist
286 Stoneylonesome Rd.
Stahlstown, PA 15687
wildflower@...

-----Original Message-----
From: Cleary, Ruark [mailto:Ruark.Cleary@...]
Sent: Wednesday, August 08, 2007 11:47 AM
To: Brian Bowen (NAA-EPPC); Charlie Nilon (NAA); Dave Borneman (NAA); Deb
Kraus (NAA); Jil Swearingen (NAA-NPS Alien); Joan Seevers (NAA-BLM); Jody
Shimp (NAA); Karen Shelly (NAA); Karen Smith (NAA); Kim Herman (NAA); Kim
Herman (NAA2); Lisa Smith (NAA); Pene Speaks (NAA); Randy Heidorn (NAA);
Randy Nyboer (NAA); Renee Kivikko (NAA-LTA); Ron Hiebert (NAA); Steve Shelly
(USFS-NAA); Steven Link (NAJ ed.); Tim Nigh (NAA); Tom Meyer (NAA); Vickie
Larson (NAA)
Cc: Nancy Wogen (BLM)
Subject: FW: Vacancy - BLM Deputy State Director, Resources - GS-340-14


-----Original Message-----
From: Peggy_Riek@... [mailto:Peggy_Riek@...]
Sent: Wednesday, August 08, 2007 10:31 AM
Subject: Vacancy - Deputy State Director, Resources - GS-340-14

Hi,

This email is to announce the vacancy for BLM-Eastern States Deputy State
Director, Division of Resources.  Please forward as necessary.

Thanks.
Peggy

Peggy Riek
BLM, Eastern States, External Affairs Office
(703) 440-1716
----- Forwarded by Peggy Riek/ESO/ES/BLM/DOI on 08/08/2007 10:01 AM -----
----- Forwarded by Michele Willingham/ESO/ES/BLM/DOI on 08/08/2007 10:00 AM
Deputy State Director, Resources - GS-0340-14
Announcement No: ES Merit-2007-0033
Opens: 8/08/07    Closes: 8/22/07
Location: Division of Resources, Springfield, Virginia
Promotion Potential:  GS-14
Moving expenses authorized
Certain incentives may be authorized
Open to any current or former Federal Employee with competitive civil
service status, reinstatement, or special hiring authority eligibility.

This announcement is open concurrently with ES-DEU-2007-0054.  You must
apply to each announcement separately if you wish to be considered under
both recruitment methods.

Deputy State Director, Resources - GS-0340-14
Announcement No: ES-DEU-2007-0054
Opens: 8/08/07    Closes: 8/22/07
Location: Division of Resources, Springfield, Virginia
Promotion Potential:  GS-14
No moving expenses authorized
Open to all qualified US Citizens

To apply please go to the website address:
http://jobsearch.usajobs.opm.gov/a9blm.asp

**********************************************
Ian Glander
HR Specialist
Bureau of Land Management (ES-95113)
(703) 440-1539 - voice
(703) 440-1797 - fax
**********************************************

#171 From: "Lisa Smith" <wildflower@...>
Date: Mon Aug 20, 2007 4:29 pm
Subject: Job Announcement: West Tennessee Natural Areas Stewardship Ecologist
wildflower@...
Send Email Send Email
 

STATE OF TENNESSEE

DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENT AND CONSERVATION

 

Division of Natural Areas

7th Floor L&C Annex

401 Church Street

Nashville, Tennessee  37243

Phone 615/532-0431   Fax 615/532-0046

 

Announcement of a Job Opening in the Tennessee Division of Natural Areas

 

Title:  Environmental Specialist 3 (West Tennessee Natural Areas Stewardship Ecologist)

Start Date: Winter 2007

Monthly Rate:  The salary is $2,956 to $4,330 per month plus state benefits package.

HoursFull-time

APPLICATION DEADLINE: August 28, 2007 

 

Position RESPONSIBILITIES: The Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation, Division of Natural Areas, anticipates hiring a working level full-time Environmental Specialist 3 to support the State Natural Areas Program as a West Tennessee Natural Areas Stewardship Ecologist.

 

The positions will be supervised by the State Natural Areas Program Manager in Nashville, and will work out of the Department’s Jackson Field Office in West Tennessee.  The incumbent will be responsible for the day-to-day administration and management of West Tennessee State Natural Areas.  For additional information about the Tennessee State Natural Areas Program, you may visit our website at http://www.state.tn.us/environment/na  .

 

Interested applicants should submit a state application form as indicated below. 

 

REQUIREMENTS:  Graduation from an accredited college or university with a bachelor’s degree in environmental science, biology, zoology, botany or other acceptable field and two years of fulltime professional environmental program work.  Qualifying fulltime environmental program experience may substitute for the required education, on a year for year basis, to a maximum of four years.  Graduate coursework in environmental science, biology, zoology, plant ecology, botany or other acceptable field may be substituted for the required experience, on a year for year basis, to a maximum of one year (24 semester hours is equivalent to one year), or two years fulltime professional environmental program work with the State of Tennessee. 

 

Applicants should possess an understanding of the concepts and practices of conservation biology with an ability to initiate and complete site design planning and stewardship actions for state natural areas.  Such activities may involve strenuous work in remote locations, and may require the use of manual and power tools and equipment. The candidate should have excellent verbal and written communication skills to successfully facilitate coordination of stewardship activities with other state, federal and local government agencies, non-profit organizations, and volunteers.  The position requires the ability to provide education and outreach programs to the general public, conservation organizations, and other agencies. The candidate should have excellent technical and professional skills to coordinate cooperative management activities with professional land managers and private landowners.  An understanding of the natural heritage network and methodology is helpful. Good botanical and zoological skills, and an understanding of the concepts of natural community classification are desirable.  Additionally, the west Tennessee Stewardship Ecologist candidate should possess an understanding of wetland systems and functions.  The applicant should poses a good computer skills, including working familiarity with various GIS applications and GPS devices.

 

APPLICATION: Any interested candidate should send a resume, transcripts, writing sample, references and completed state application for the Environmental Specialist 3 position to the Division of Natural Areas at the address listed below.  Specifications and Qualifications for the Environmental Specialist 3 position can be found at (you will need Adobe Acrobat Reader to view the portable document format (pdf)):

http://www.state.tn.us/personnel/specs/72922.pdf

 

A printable state application form can be downloaded at: http://www.state.tn.us/personnel/Application/STATE%20OF%20TN%20APPLICATION.pdf 

 

DEADLINE:  Applications should be submitted no later than August 28th, 2007.

 

CONTACT:  Any questions may be directed to Reggie Reeves at the Division of Natural Areas.

 

Tennessee Dept. of Environment & Conservation

Division of Natural Heritage

401 Church St., 7th Floor L&C Tower

Nashville, TN 37243-0447

 

Phone:  (615) 532-0431

Fax:  (615) 532-0046

E-mail:   reggie.reeves@...

Website: http://www.state.tn.us/environment/na

 

 

 

 

Lisa L. Smith

Consulting Ecologist

286 Stoneylonesome Rd.

Stahlstown, PA 15687

wildflower@...

 


#172 From: "Lisa Smith" <wildflower@...>
Date: Mon Aug 20, 2007 6:31 pm
Subject: FW: [ma-eppc] Fw: National Park Service SE Exotic Plant Management Team Internships
wildflower@...
Send Email Send Email
 

 

 


From: ma-eppc@yahoogroups.com [mailto:ma-eppc@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Betsy_Lyman@...
Sent: Friday, August 17, 2007 11:51 PM
To: DRIPP@yahoogroups.com; ma-eppc@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [ma-eppc] Fw: National Park Service SE Exotic Plant Management Team Internships

 


National Park Service - Southeast Exotic Plant Management Team

2 full-time interns start September 2007 - 26 weeks

Stationed: Asheville, North Carolina

Botany GPS Resource Management

The associates will serve 18 National Park Units in the southeastern US as
part of the Southeast Exotic Plant Management Team (SE-EPMT). The Team is
duty stationed at the Blue Ridge Parkway in Asheville, North Carolina. Base
housing will be a shared apartment in Asheville.

Duties include: Implementing and documenting invasive, exotic plant
management control methods including manual, mechanical, and chemical
techniques. Equipment used includes chainsaws, pole saws, hedge cutters,
brush cutters, assorted hand tools, manual and gas powered sprayers, manual
4-wheel drive and all terrain vehicles, GPS and digital camera. Associates
will be traveling most weekdays; housing while traveling will be in
motels/hotels or park facilities; transportation will be provided from the
Blue Ridge Parkway to work sites. Travel expenses are reimbursed or
advanced. Personal transportation needed from base housing to local duty
station.

Training/Educational opportunities: Safe and effective use of chainsaws and
other power tools; safe and effective use of herbicides; use of personal
protective equipment; safety-first aid and CPR; ATV training and operation;
defensive driving; Red Card (wildland fire fighter) certification; use of
GPS/GIS and various database and computer programs. Position offers an
exceptional opportunity to visit unique, often remote, protected areas as
well as the opportunity to pursue a career with the National Park Service.

Requirements: Team players in excellent physical condition; ability to
carry 40 lb. up to 5 miles over steep terrain 10 hours/day; willingness to
travel and to use various tools and herbicides after training; valid
driver's license. Associates must be amicable to varying and flexible work
schedules.

Desire: College course work in botany/horticulture or experience in
plant/vegetation identification and management; experience with GPS/GIS;
ability to work effectively in a group or individually with minimal
supervision under physically challenging conditions; experience operating
and maintaining power equipment and 4-wheel drive vehicles a plus.
Experience with Adobe Photoshop, Creative Suite or other web design
software a plus.

Additional information: Housing and utilities provided in Asheville; area
served covers parts of seven states; weekly stipend; insurance provided;
tuition or student loan award may be available; student loans deferred for
duration of internship. Position involves strenuous work with considerable
travel. Valid driver’s license and personal transportation to base office
in Asheville required.

For more information contact:

Nancy Fraley
Coordinator
Southeast Exotic Plant Management Team
67 Ranger Drive
Asheville, NC 28805
828-296-0850 x100


#173 From: "abirome2000" <abirome@...>
Date: Wed Aug 29, 2007 7:24 pm
Subject: North American Ecotourism Conference - Madison, Wisconsin - Sept. 26-28
abirome2000
Send Email Send Email
 

Hello All,

Announcing the North American Ecotourism Conference - Madison, Wisconsin - Sept. 26-28

See www.ecotourismconference.org/

Many of you from the midwest and elsewhere may be interested in this conference (to be held at the Monona Terrace, where NAA held its annual conference in 2003).  The International Ecotourism Society is the sponsor/organizer and they are looking for more locally-based attendees, as well as speakers.  One session of particular interest to NAA members, and for which they have space for presenters, is the one entitled "Enhancing Biodiversity." 

 Please contact Christina at ccavaliere@... if you are interested in giving a talk.  In any case, please consider attending. 

 
Abi Rome


#174 From: "abirome2000" <abirome@...>
Date: Tue Oct 16, 2007 3:04 pm
Subject: NAA International Workshop to Nepal - March 2008
abirome2000
Send Email Send Email
 
I'd like to invite you to join fellow conservation professionals on NAA's 11th international workshop.  This year we will be going to Nepal, where we'll visit and learn four large protected areas in diverse habitats, including grasslands, riverine habitats, tropical and subtropical forests, mountain and pre-montane areas.  We will also engage in a range of other experiences of a professional nature relevant to the cultural, environmental and social features in Nepal.   

We will meet with conservation colleagues to discuss their programs, concerns, successes and challenges, and we'll contribute to local conservation actions by sharing our own knowledge and experience with our hosts, offering support to the organizations we visit, and developing long-lasting conservation alliances.  

Highlights include:
 
•    Shivpuri National Park
•    Royal Chitwan National Park
•    Annapurna Conservation Area
•    Pokhara Valley
•    Cultural World Heritage sites in Kathmandu
•    Trekking in the Himalayas
•    Bagmara and Kumroj Community Forests
•    International Mountain Museum
•    Crocodile Breeding Center

For more information, contact Abi Rome at abirome@... or 301-608-8094; or contact the NAA at mail@....  

Because March is approaching rapidly, we'll need to hear from you soon regarding your interest.  Thanks.

#175 From: "abirome2000" <abirome@...>
Date: Wed Dec 5, 2007 3:03 pm
Subject: NAA Workshop to Nepal - March 16 - 27, 2008 - spaces available
abirome2000
Send Email Send Email
 
We still have spaces available and - in fact - need at least one more person to sign up for NAA's International Workshop to Nepal in March.   Please join us!    Details below.

And, if you can, please contact Abi (see below) as soon as possible. 

Natural Areas Association 11th International Workshop to Nepal
- March 16 - 27, 2008


We'll visit and learn four large protected areas in diverse habitats, including grasslands, riverine habitats, tropical and subtropical forests, mountain and pre-montane areas.  We will also engage in a range of other experiences of a professional nature relevant to the cultural, environmental and social features in Nepal.   

We will meet with conservation colleagues to discuss their programs, concerns, successes and challenges, and we'll contribute to local conservation actions by sharing our own knowledge and experience with our hosts, offering support to the organizations we visit, and developing long-lasting conservation alliances.  

Highlights include:
 
•    Shivpuri National Park
•    Royal Chitwan National Park
•    Annapurna Conservation Area
•    Pokhara Valley
•    Cultural World Heritage sites in Kathmandu
•    Trekking in the Himalayas
•    Bagmara and Kumroj Community Forests
•    International Mountain Museum
•    Crocodile Breeding Center

For more information, contact Abi Rome at abirome@... or 301-608-8094; or contact the NAA at mail@....  

Because March is approaching rapidly, we'll need to hear from you soon regarding your interest.  Thanks.

#176 From: "ialm@..." <ialm@...>
Date: Wed Dec 5, 2007 9:28 pm
Subject: Climate Action at the Park: wildfires, invasives, corridors, tree planting
ialm@...
Send Email Send Email
 
This message was originally sent to the list serve for activists
that enjoy and protect butterflies and other insects. I am sending
it to assist in responding to questions about how climate change
relates to management and restoration of natural areas. Technical
details I believe are important for more realistic benefits to our
natural areas. For example recent fires in California were caused
by heavy rain during the growing season followed by severe drought
but the primary cause was that 2/3 of the victims moved to fire
prone areas that we in the conservation movement had recommended
be set aside as parks (with some success) to avoid such a disaster.
Cheers.

Marc

-----Original Message-----
From: VA-MD-DE-Bugs AT yahoogroups.com
[mailto:VA-MD-DE-Bugs AT yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Harry Pavulaan
Sent: Wednesday, November 07, 2007 8:57 AM
To: VA-MD-DE-Bugs AT yahoogroups.com
Subject: [VA-MD-DE-Bugs] RE: Natural Areas and Climate Change?

All:

regarding:


Climate Action at the Park

Help Swann Park survive global warming and climate change.


Not to engage in debate, but I seriously do not think that invasive plant
species are at any advantage over our native species simply due to "global
warming", if that's what's being implied. Most of our non-native invasives
are of Eurasian origin and are well adapted to cold-temperate climates such
as our own. Let's give these plants the credit they deserve. They are
themselves hardy competitors and are better adapted here because factors
which keep them under control in their own native lands are not present
here. Perhaps the invasives are just as susceptible to climate change.

The New York City metro area, where I grew up, was ground zero for invasive
species since I was a kid. As I remember, winters were quite severe in the
60's, summers nowhere nearly as hot as down here in D.C., yet Japanese
Honeysuckles and English Ivy covered every bit of forest edge from ground to
canopy (ah, the sweet smell of summer). Though Ailanthus filled every
vacant space, I never did find Ailanthus Silk Moths. Fields were thick with
Cresses, Mustards, Dandelions, English Plantain and other species of
Eurasian origin and I doubt many of the plants that I trampled in search of
bugs and snakes were of native origin. We never heard of global warming
back then. We need to control invasives because our native ecosystem just
can't do the job by itself. Just a different view.

Harry



Hi Harry,


I agree with all of your comments. To educate the new enormous force
of young folks that are working on climate change about nature, I have
joined the core of naturalists that are treating the global warming
movement as a stepping stone to the larger conservation movement for
these newcomers. As bad as the non-native vines are they are even
worse with global warming. Also, invasive species tend to be
generalists, as opposed to specialists and climate change creates
disturbed habitats generalists are more adapted to.

But I agree, climate change is only a small part of the cause of
invasive species problems.

Following are some general thoughts I have.

Should we just work on removing the causes of global warming and
climate change or should we recognize that we may not be able to stop
all global warming and thus should also ameliorate the effects.

For example, providing wildlife migration corridors is one way to
adapt to climate change. Species of plant and animal life live in a
shifting mosaic pattern and thus need migration corridors (a minimum
of 1600 feet wide) to adapt to storms, diseases, hydrological changes
and the changes in climate even with out global warming. Without the
ability to move through what are now cities, highways and farms about
half the 1,000 species that typically reside in a natural area of 100
acres become extirpated over a period of about 5 decades. The Nature
Conservancy made this issue of forest fragmentation one of their top
issues a few decades ago before global warming. The state of
Maryland's DNR Green Print Program is based on this issue and has
identified high priority corridors and hubs to preserve with Program
Open Space. Climate change caused by Man has increased this problem
significantly.

Likewise the great increase in wildfires occurred several decades ago
because of forest fire suppression which resulted in crown fires
rather than normal fires. Good management is to have prescribed
burning in longleaf pine wiregrass ecosystems in the southeast and
Ponderosa Pine, Gamble Oak ecosystems in the West where fire is a
natural component of the ecosystem. The non-native invasive cheat
grass, which benefits from fire by growing much more rapidly, causes
much, much more frequent and larger fires. The four governors
finally get it this year and are asking congress to appropriate funds
to remove cheat grass. We have been telling them this for ten years
just as we told New Orleans that the preservation of the wetlands to
control hurricanes was necessary to prevent a storm such as Katrina
from destroying the city. I really do wish people would listen to our
scientists. Global warming has made the existing serious problems
significantly worse.

A complex native ecosystem of at least 16 species of trees, shrubs and
ground cover works many times better than trees alone in controlling
global warming and storm water run off. At Camp Guernsey, Wyoming, for
example I funded (as the natural resources manager of the Army
National Guard) such a restoration project for erosion control because
of the studies that showed the contributions of the individual species
to the total root structure at different depths in the ground.

Global warming has significantly exacerbated the problem of invasive
species, as well as water pollution, but is, of course, not the
primary cause. Again, shall we adapt to global warming and climate
change by reversing the effects or should we only try to reduce it
with education and legislation? Should global warming and climate
change be an avenue to work on a variety of environmental problems?

Unfortunately I remember in the early 1970's shortly after Earth Day,
Acid Rain was the subject of about half of the media coverage of
environment in newspapers, radio and television for about 2 years.
Then a widely viewed program (something like 60 minutes) debunked acid
rain and said it was all a fake. After that the media coverage of acid
rain stopped abruptly and environmental coverage in general dropped
greatly. Actually acid rain is a very, very, serious air pollution and
water pollution problem along the Blue Ridge and in up state New York
where there is little calcium buffering capacity. It is an important
problem elsewhere. The program was wrong and media coverage of acid
rain went from one extreme to the other extreme. It should not have
received half the media attention. One tenth, or even one fifth, would
have been more appropriate.

So let us cover climate change as a very important issues in it's own
right but also utilize it as an introduction to the other related
environmental issues. Cheers.

Marc Imlay PhD
Conservation biologist, Anacostia Watershed Society


Climate Action at the Park

Help Swann Park survive global warming and climate change. Saturday,
November 10, 1-4 pm. Rescue native plants from non-native invasive plants,
remove trash, participate in water quality sampling and hear introductory
talks about climate action.
On Saturday, November 10, we will walk through Swann Park in Charles
County, look for and remove invasive plants, identify and appreciate the
native plants and animals we have rescued, bag trash we come across, and
participate in water quality sampling on the wetlands meadow tributary to
the Mattawoman Creek in Swann Park.

Participating organizations with speakers include Maryland Native Plant
Society www.mdflora.org , Sierra Club, http://maryland.sierraclub.org and
Chesapeake Climate Action Network www.chesapeakeclimate.org .

Starting in 1999 volunteers have removed almost all of the English Ivy,
Japanese Stilt Grass, Chinese Privett, Swedish Ivy, Asiatic Bittersweet,
Japanese Knotweed, Japanese Honeysuckle and other plants from Europe and
Asia to rescue native violets, ferns, orchids, asters, St. Andrew’s Cross
and other native American plants that contribute to global biological
diversity. These native plants provide ecosystem services that reduce CO2
emissions and storm water and nitrogen runoff to the Chesapeake Bay.
Invasive species, especially vines, generally can survive the new climate
better.

Directions: Meet at the Ruth B. Swann Park-Potomac Branch Library parking
lot, 20 miles south of Washington Beltway (I-495) on Rt. 210 (Indian Head
Hwy), about a mile and a half south from the traffic light on Rt. 2l0 in
Bryans Road .Give yourself 30 to 40 minutes from the Beltway. Casual
clothing, long sleeves and pants, sturdy comfortable walking boots/shoes,
gloves are encouraged for these events.

Contact: Marc Imlay 301-283-0808.

PhD Conservation biologist, Anacostia Watershed Society
(301-699-6204, 301-283-0808 301-442-5657 cell)


--------------------------------------------------------------------
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#177 From: "Lisa Smith" <wildflower@...>
Date: Fri Jan 4, 2008 2:12 pm
Subject: FW: [ma-eppc] 2008 Natural Resources Internship in Prospect Park, Brooklyn
wildflower@...
Send Email Send Email
 

 

 

 

From: ma-eppc@yahoogroups.com [mailto:ma-eppc@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of dicheeks
Sent: Wednesday, January 02, 2008 10:28 AM
To: ma-eppc@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [ma-eppc] 2008 Natural Resources Internship in Prospect Park, Brooklyn

 

Please distribute the following 2008 Natural Resources Internship advertisement.  Please forward at will and/or post it where any interested students might be able to find it.  Thanks for your time.

Jessica

Jessica M. DiCicco

Forest Ecologist

Prospect Park Alliance

95 Prospect Park West

Brooklyn, NY  11215

__________________________________________________

INTERNSHIP OFFERED BY PROSPECT PARK ALLIANCE NATURAL RESOURCES CREW (NRC)– SUMMER 2008

 

 Natural Resources Internship

Opportunity to join a diverse and dedicated crew managing 250 acres of woodlands and 62 acres of water bodies located within historic Prospect Park.  The intern will have the opportunity to take part in a variety of projects including woodland restoration, lake/pond monitoring, vegetation monitoring, and a possibility for independent study.

Successful candidate should have an interest in ecology, aptitude for fieldwork, enjoy learning new concepts, and be prepared for physical work.  Candidate should be a college or graduate student enrolled in a relevant field of study (i.e. ecology, natural resource management, biological sciences, forestry, etc.).  Position normally runs June through August, can start mid-May, approximately 9 weeks, 35 hours/week, $9.75/hr.

Send cover letter and resume to: John Jordan, Landscape Management Office, 95 Prospect Park West, Brooklyn, NY 11215 or via e-mail to: Job002@prospectpark.org. Questions?  Contact John Jordan at 718-287-8450 x105.  The Prospect Park Alliance is an equal opportunity employer.


#178 From: "Lisa Smith" <wildflower@...>
Date: Fri Jan 4, 2008 2:58 pm
Subject: FW: [ma-eppc] Adkins Arboretum 2008 Summer Internships
wildflower@...
Send Email Send Email
 

 

 


From: ma-eppc@yahoogroups.com [mailto:ma-eppc@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Sylvan Kaufman
Sent: Thursday, January 03, 2008 10:42 AM
To: ChesapeakeCLC@yahoogroups.com; ma-eppc@yahoogroups.com; NativePlantseast@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [ma-eppc] Adkins Arboretum 2008 Summer Internships

 

Adkins Arboretum

 

2008 Internship Program

 

Applications due March 7, 2008

 

Adkins Arboretum, a 400 acre arboretum in Maryland specializing in native plants of the Delmarva Peninsula, seeks two environmental science or public horticulture interns.  Interns will work with professional staff on garden maintenance, plant propagation, and seed collection as well as plant record keeping, plant community data collection, invasive plant removal, grounds maintenance, and will assist with greeting the public, educational programs and special events.  Interns are encouraged to conduct an independent project in horticulture, ecological research, or environmental education. Field trips to area parks, natural areas and gardens and participation in public programs are part of the internship.  This internship is an excellent opportunity to gain a broad range of experiences working at a small non-profit organization.

 

$9/hour, 35-40 hours/week. May – October, dates flexible.  To apply, send contact information for two references, resume and cover letter including information about background and career goals to:

 

Sylvan Kaufman, Conservation Curator

Adkins Arboretum

PO Box 100

Ridgely, MD 21660

Phone: (410) 634-2847 x24

FAX: (410) 634-2878

skaufman@adkinsarboretum.org

 

Applications are due March 7.  Interviews by phone or in person will be conducted for selected applicants in March.

Housing is not available on site, but staff can assist in locating housing. For more information about the Arboretum, visit www.adkinsarboretum.org.

 

Please pass this announcement on to anyone interested.


#179 From: "Sara Webb" <Swebb@...>
Date: Mon Jan 14, 2008 1:14 am
Subject: Faculty position/environmental studies
Swebb@...
Send Email Send Email
 
To NAA Colleagues: Please consider and share this position announcement in
environmental geoscience/geography:

ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES: Drew University, a highly selective liberal arts college
located 30 miles outside New York City, seeks applications for a new
tenure-track position of Associate or Assistant Professor to help build a new
interdisciplinary major in Environmental Studies and Sustainability. Candidates
should have expertise in GIS and in environmental geology, physical geography,
or a closely related field, and the area of specialization must relate to
environmental issues. This faculty member would teach GIS, environmental
geography or geology, and (with others) gateway and core courses for the new
major. In addition, s/he would help others integrate GIS into their courses and
research.  A productive program of research with undergraduates is expected. 
Requires Ph.D. and a record of teaching  excellence and research productivity. 
Submit CV, statement of teaching philosophy and description of research, three
reference letters, and evidence of teaching excellence to: Dr. Sara Webb,
Biology Dept, Drew University, Madison NJ 07940, swebb@.... Applications
received by Feb. 1, 2008, will receive highest consideration. To enrich
education through diversity, Drew University is an AA/EOE employer.

***********************************************
Sara Webb
Professor of Biology and
Director of Environmental Studies
Drew University
Madison NJ 07940
swebb@...
973-408-3550
***********************************************

#180 From: "Lisa Smith" <wildflower@...>
Date: Mon Jan 14, 2008 5:20 pm
Subject: FW: [ma-eppc] Fw: Great Lakes EPMT crew leader position open
wildflower@...
Send Email Send Email
 

The Great Lakes Exotic Plant Management Team (EPMT) crew leader position is
now posted on the USA jobs website under the following announcements.

MWRO-08-OC-0026 all candidates
MWRO-08-MP-0049 merit promotion

This is a permanent STF (subject to furlough) position duty stationed in
Ashland WI. The incumbent is responsible for the day to day direction of
invasive plant work crews serving 8 National Parks in the western Great
Lakes during the growing season. Other responsibilities include assisting
parks with invasive plant management plans and partnering with others to
promote successful weed management activities.

Please distribute to those who may be interested.

Carmen Chapin
Liaison, Great Lakes Exotic Plant Management Team

National Park Service
Great Lakes Network Office
2800 Lakeshore Drive E., Suite D
Ashland, WI 54806
ph: 715-682-0631 x 30
fax: 715-682-6190
Carmen_Chapin@nps.gov


#181 From: "Lisa Smith" <wildflower@...>
Date: Tue Jan 29, 2008 3:18 pm
Subject: Job announcement in Tennessee
wildflower@...
Send Email Send Email
 
Job announcement in Tennessee:
 

SPRING BREAK 2008      JOB OPPORTUNITY!

Tennessee Youth Conservation Corps

Opportunity with the Tennessee Division of Natural Areas

At Pickett State Park and Pickett State Forest

         

 

The Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation, Division of Natural Areas, is recruiting applicants for the 2008 Tennessee Youth Conservation Corps Program.  The TYCC Program is expected to run for 2 weeks during March of 2008 (2 one-week sessions) at Pickett State Park.  Applicants for the Division of Natural Areas TYCC Program will be college students at least 18 years of age with an interest in conservation and public service.

 

Mission:

The purpose of the Tennessee Youth Conservation Corps is to promote the principles of conservation and resource management among the youth of Tennessee by allowing them the opportunity to participate in resource management and restoration projects, and environmental education activities on State Parks and Natural Areas.

 

Qualifications:

College students at least 18 years of age

Actively enrolled in undergraduate or graduate course work

Physically fit

 

Pay:

Crew Members (up to 8) @ $7.16/ Hour

Transportation and lodging for overnight travel will be provided, meals for overnight travel will

be reimbursed (Host Site is Pickett State Park)

Cabins will be used for lodging at Pickett State Park

 

Work Schedule:

Will vary depending on weather and individual projects, but will likely be Monday through Friday for 1 week (2 one-week sessions) during March 2008 to coincide with university and college Spring Breaks.

 

 

 

 

 

What's the job description or responsibilities of the participants?

Strong interest in protecting the natural resources of Tennessee

Desire to learn more about Tennessee State Parks and the conservation of rare plant species

Physically fit and able to work on projects in the outdoors that may be strenuous

May involve long hikes to the work site

Ability to work well with others in a team setting

Driver’s license/or transportation to work

Must be honest, dependable, and hard working

Must be available for overnight travel for up to 4 nights for 1 week

 

What kind of projects will participants be working on?

Resource Management and Ecological Restoration

Rare Plant Species Habitat Management

Hiking Trail Construction and Maintenance

Interpretive Sign Installation

Hiking Trail Marking

Wood Fence Installation

 

What will participants receive?

Youth Development 

Opportunity to learn new skills

Instruction & positive feedback

Opportunity to explore career options in conservation

Work in outdoors

Chance to work with professional staff or skilled volunteers

Opportunity to contribute to your community and the environment

 

How to Apply:

Interested candidates should send a resume and completed state application for the SIR-TYCC position to the Division of Natural Areas at the address listed below.  A printable state application form can be downloaded at: http://www.state.tn.us/personnel/Application/STATE%20OF%20TN%20APPLICATION.pdf 

 

Deadline:

Applications should be submitted no later than February 8th, 2008.  Interviews will be held during the following week in Nashville, TN.

 

Contact information:

Applicants may call the Tennessee Division of Natural Areas at 615-532-0431 for additional information, or visit the Division web site at: http://www.state.tn.us/environment/na/ for general information on the Division of Natural Areas.

 

Tennessee Division of Natural Areas

7th Floor, L&C Annex

401 Church Street

Nashville, Tennessee 37243

 
Lisa L. Smith
Consulting Ecologist
286 Stoneylonesome Rd.
Stahlstown, PA 15687
 


From: Kevin Fitch [mailto:Kevin.Fitch@...]
Sent: Monday, January 28, 2008 12:31 PM
To: Ed Chester; Steven Hamilton; Joe Schiller; Arthur Floyd Scott; Theo Witsell; Rufus Darden; John Lamb; Kevin Willis; Larry Philpott; Letha McEntee; Mark Moran; Michael Black; Mike Hodges; Rick McWhite; Steve Arnold; Steve Farrington; Susan Finger; James J Bean; Dennis Horn; Earl Kiech; Steve Samoray; Rich Clements; Alan Bottomlee; Jeff Richards; Jeff Holmes; Doug Ripley; Geoff Call; Tim Merritt; Lee Patrick; Steve Manning; lisa Smith; Darlene Panvini; Scott Franklin; Kim Sadler; Shea Cofer; Bob Parish; Milo Pyne; Larry Cook; Susan Bryant; Kris Johnson; Nancy Fraley; Terri Hogan; Pat Parr; Andrea English; Anni Self; Dr.Jill Johnson; Jeffrey Piatt; John Christof; Juliana Kyzar; Robin Bible; Sam Reed; Shane Petty; Steven Rogers; Tracy Jackson; Van Colebank; Ward Tarkington; Doyle Newberry; Gabby Call; Leslie Colley; Sally Palmer; Cory Holliday Cory Holliday; Chuck Bargeron; Bill Wolfe; DK Smith; Jack Ranney; Claude Bailey; Dwayne Estes
Subject: Fwd: March TYCC announcement

Please distribute
 
Thanks
 
KF

>>> David Lincicome 1/28/2008 10:44 AM >>>
I've attached the March TYCC announcement for the work at Pickett SP.  We've distributed it around already, but feel free to send to folks you know that may have kids/students that may be interested.  Thanks.
 
DL
 

#182 From: "abirome2000" <abirome@...>
Date: Sun Feb 17, 2008 8:21 pm
Subject: Announcing the 2008 International Seminar on Protected Area Management
abirome2000
Send Email Send Email
 

I received this announcement from one of NAA's international guests (to the 2006 NAA conference in Flagstaff), Alicia de la Cruz-Novey.  Thought others on this list might be interested.


Abi Rome


Dear Colleague: 

 

We are please to announce that we are taking applications for participation in the sixth-annual International Seminar on Protected Area Management to be held August 4-22, 2008 at the University of Montana, USA. 

 

This Seminar is a technical and professional course designed for mid-career planners and managers of nationally significant protected areas worldwide.  The program is initiated and organized by the Universities of Montana, Idaho and Colorado State and the USDA Forest Service Office of International Programs.  Participants will evaluate policies and institutional arrangements that sustain both people and natural resources.

 

To experience the opportunities available in the northern Rocky Mountain region, participants will travel to several types of protected areas including Glacier and Yellowstone National Parks, and Lolo, Bitterroot, and Flathead National Forests.  Participants will also travel to Washington DC to discuss protected area management and funding issues. Particular attention will be directed toward sustainable tourism development, transboundary management in the face of climate change, and ways to incorporate community interests in area management.  

 

Additional information about this Seminar including application details are available at: http://www.fs.fed.us/global/is/ispam/welcome.htm. Applications are due May 2, 2008.  Since enrollment in the Seminar is limited, applicants are encouraged to apply as early as possible.  This course is offered in the English language, so English speaking proficiency is a requirement for course attendance.  All course expenses, including in-country travel, lodging, meals, and materials, are covered by the tuition expense.  Applicants must seek and acquire financial sponsorship to at tend, as funding for participation is not available from the Seminar organizers.  Applicants are also responsible for transportation to and from the United States. 

 

Feel free to contact me with any questions via the address above or e-mail at: pam@.... Thank you in advance for your interest, and please pass this announcement on to other colleagues who may have an interest in attending this year's program.

 

Sincerely,                                                                                                       

                                                           

Libby Khumalo

 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Mrs. Libby Khumalo
Program Coordinator
International Seminar on Protected Area Management
College of Forestry and Conservation
The University of Montana
32 Campus Drive
Missoula, MT 59812 USA
Email: pam@...
Phone: (406) 243-6610
Fax: (406) 243-6656
         http://www.protectedareas.net/seminar/ispam.htm


#183 From: Marc_Albert@...
Date: Mon Feb 18, 2008 6:01 am
Subject: Marc Albert is out of the office.
Marc_Albert@...
Send Email Send Email
 
I will be out of the office starting  02/09/2008 and will not return until
02/19/2008.

I will be away the week of February 11th, returing after Presidents day on
Tuesday February 19th.

#184 From: "Lisa Smith" <wildflower@...>
Date: Wed Feb 20, 2008 2:13 pm
Subject: FW: [ma-eppc] Jobs: summer field Botanists or Ecologists (multiple locations)
wildflower@...
Send Email Send Email
 

 

 

From: ma-eppc@yahoogroups.com [mailto:ma-eppc@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of treekat_2
Sent: Tuesday, February 19, 2008 4:08 PM
To: ma-eppc@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [ma-eppc] Jobs: summer field Botanists or Ecologists (multiple locations)

 

USDA Forest Service, Northern Research Station, Forest Inventory and
Analysis (FIA) http://www.nrs.fs.fed.us/fia/

Title: Vegetation Specialist (contract Botanist or Ecologist)
Number of Positions: 12
Grade: GS 7 or 9
Time Period: June 2, through no later than September 12, 2008
Duty Station Locations: Murphysboro, IL; Old Town, ME; Westfield,
MA; Manistique, MI; Springfield, MO; Columbia, MO; Cortland, NY;
Lakeville, NY; New Philadelphia, OH; Clearfield, PA; Long Pond, PA;
and Elkins, WV

Duties: The Vegetation Specialists will be primarily responsible for
the collection of FIA Vegetation Diversity and Structure Indicator
data (http://www.nrs.fs.fed.us/fia/topics/veg/) including species
identification and cover estimates for all trees, shrubs, herbs,
graminoids, ferns, and fern allies occurring on FIA plots. The
Vegetation Specialist will work as a member of a multi-person FIA
field crew under the direction of a crew leader, and will assist with
other field measurements as time allows. FIA plot locations are
scattered throughout a state or groups of states and are not limited
to National Forest Lands; the vast majority of the plots are located
on private property. The work requires regular and recurring
physical exertion in the form of travel on foot over rough, uneven,
and steep terrain. Field crews travel frequently and work
independently. The work requires several hours of driving, several
days each week. During travel periods (approximately June through
September), crews will change locations frequently, often on a weekly
or daily basis. Lodging is generally in motel/hotels.

Qualifications Required:

Education

Degree: (Botanist:) Botany; or basic plant science, that included at
least 24 semester hours in botany; or (Ecologist:) Biology, or a
related field of science, that included at least 30 semester hours in
basic and applied sciences -- these hours must have included at least
9 semester hours in ecology, and 12 semester hours in physical and
mathematical sciences.

GS-7: PLUS 1 year of graduate-level education or superior academic
achievement. GS-9: PLUS 2 years of graduate-level education or
Master's Degree.

OR

Experience

GS-7: one year of specialized experience equivalent to the next lower
grade level. GS-9: one year specialized experience equivalent to the
next lower grade level. (Specialized Experience Definition:
Substantial experience in various biological techniques which has
equipped the applicant with the knowledge, skills and abilities
needed to successfully perform the duties of the position to be
filled.)

OR

Combination of Education and Experience

In addition to Botanist or Ecologist qualifications listed above,
applications will be evaluated for specific knowledge, skills, and
abilities, including:

- Knowledge of the principles, concepts, and practices of botany

- Ability to perform basic data processing, tracking, and editing
functions using word processing, spreadsheet, and database computer
programs; and

- Ability to identify regional vascular plant species – including
trees, shrubs, herbs, graminoids, ferns, and fern allies – using
regional and local comprehensive identification keys.

When submitting a resume, qualifications/experience in these areas
should be highlighted. Any previous experience completing the FIA
Vegetation Indicator or other vegetation inventories should be
included.

For Additional Information:

Applications will consist of an updated resume addressing the
qualifications outlined above under "Qualifications required" and a
copy of your most recent college transcripts. Resumes should include
names and contact phone information for previous employers and
references.

To receive an electronic copy of the detailed position announcement,
which includes additional specific information regarding: work
schedules; wages based on education, experience, and duty station
location; work related travel; government provided property; training
and certification requirements; and contracting information, contact:

Bob Ilgenfritz
U.S. Forest Service
11Campus Blvd., Ste. 200
Newtown Square, PA 19073
Cell Phone: 412-523-2495 – best contact
Office Phone 610-557-4061
Fax: 610-557-4250
E-mail: rilgenfritz@fs.fed.us


#185 From: "Lisa Smith" <wildflower@...>
Date: Wed Feb 20, 2008 2:16 pm
Subject: FW: [ma-eppc] Job: TNC Botanical Assistant Intern (app. deadline March 14th)
wildflower@...
Send Email Send Email
 

 

 

Lisa L. Smith

Consulting Ecologist

286 Stoneylonesome Rd.

Stahlstown, PA 15687

wildflower@...


From: ma-eppc@yahoogroups.com [mailto:ma-eppc@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of creveling
Sent: Tuesday, February 19, 2008 6:56 PM
To: ma-eppc@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [ma-eppc] Job: TNC Botanical Assistant Intern (app. deadline March 14th)

 

MA-EPPC subscribers,

Please review or distribute, as appropriate, this job opportunity
description. The position is a six-month internship with The Nature
Conservancy in New Jersey, with a focus on forest health and
invasive plant species.

Thank you,

Ellen Creveling
Conservation Science Coordinator

Position Description

Title: Polly Holden Botanical Assistant Intern
(full time, temporary)
Job name: Science Intern
Job number:: 950005
Supervisor: Conservation Science Coordinator
Location: Chester, Morris County, New Jersey
Position duration: Monday, April 14th through Friday, October
10th, 2008

Summary of Position:
The Polly Holden Botanical Assistant Intern will contribute to
applied forest health and biodiversity research efforts, with a
focus on key threats to northern New Jersey forests. The position
will primarily involve conducting botanical field surveys in
northern New Jersey and the Pine Barrens regions of New Jersey, but
other responsibilities comprise a wide variety of tasks including,
but not limited to field work, literature research, data entry, and
report writing. The intern will be exposed to a broad range of
educational opportunities during the course of the summer field
season. These may include learning about the identification of a
variety of taxa and the practical conservation of large landscapes,
participating in conservation planning efforts and GIS analyses,
working with stewardship staff on land management issues, and
gaining exposure to a global conservation organization. The
position will be based at The Nature Conservancy's New Jersey Field
office, located in Chester, New Jersey. This is a paid position for
35 hours/week.

Essential Functions:
1. Conduct invasive species mapping, perform forest health surveys,
participate in deer browse impact research, map natural communities,
and conduct rare plant surveys and multi-taxa surveys as needed.
2. Assist in planning the logistics and protocols for a long-term
biological inventory and monitoring program.
3. Perform a variety of other office-based work including data
entry, data analysis, and report writing.
4. Contribute to various on-going conservation science, planning,
and on-the-ground-management activities, with opportunities to learn
new skills and enhance existing knowledge.

Qualifications:
1. Bachelor's degree in biology, forestry, range, fisheries,
wildlife management, a related field, or equivalent experience, and
one field season of plant surveying.
2. Ability to identify the plant species of New Jersey or the
demonstrated ability to learn these species quickly.
3. Ability to perform physical labor under a variety of weather
conditions.
4. Ability to work alone or in a team in the field, as well as to
navigate by GPS.
5. Ability to work efficiently and in an organized manner with
strong attention to detail.
6. A cheerful and outgoing personality, positive attitude, sense of
humor and team spirit.
7. Willingness to work nights and weekends as needed.

Application deadline: Friday, March 14th, 2008
Please e-mail or send a cover letter, resume, and three references
to:
Heather Austin
Conservation Operations Manager
2350 Route 47
Delmont, NJ 08314

HAUSTIN@TNC.ORG
The Nature Conservancy is an Equal Opportunity Employer


#186 From: "Lisa Smith" <wildflower@...>
Date: Thu Feb 21, 2008 4:23 pm
Subject: Save The Date! Natural Areas Conference 2008
wildflower@...
Send Email Send Email
 

 

 

Lisa L. Smith

Consulting Ecologist

286 Stoneylonesome Rd.

Stahlstown, PA 15687

wildflower@...


From: The Natural Areas Association [mailto:mail@...] On Behalf Of The Natural Areas Association
Sent: Tuesday, February 19, 2008 8:20 PM
To: brian.bowen@...
Subject: Save The Date! Natural Areas Conference 2008

 

 

 

 

Save The Date!

 

Natural Areas Conference 2008

 

Click on the link below (or paste into your browser) for details!

 

 

The Call for Papers will be sent out in early March; stay tuned to the NAA website www.naturalarea.org for details!

 

Natural Areas Association         www.naturalarea.org

Mailing address: PO Box 1102  Bend, OR 97709

Ph: 541-317-0199   mail@...

 

Natural Areas Conference 2008 poster

 

 

 

This email was sent to brian.bowen@..., by mail@...

Natural Areas Association | 115 NW Oregon Ave., Ste 28 | Bend | OR | 97701


#187 From: Shannon Jones <sweeetgirl88@...>
Date: Mon Mar 31, 2008 4:20 pm
Subject: sending messages to members
sweeetgirl88
Send Email Send Email
 
I would like to have the ability to send and recieve e-mails to other members.


You rock. That's why Blockbuster's offering you one month of Blockbuster Total Access, No Cost.

#188 From: "Marc Imlay" <ialm@...>
Date: Thu Apr 24, 2008 11:20 am
Subject: Early Detection and rapid Response for a continent. April issue of Chesapeake Bay Journal
ialm@...
Send Email Send Email
 

 

 

Take a look at the April issue of the Bay Journal, page 1. Cheers Marc

Chesapeake Bay Journal: Wave bye-bye to wavyleaf basketgrass ...

Wave bye-bye to wavyleaf basketgrass

Early detection-and rapid response-provides hope for eradicating Asian plant in Maryland-a rare victory over an invasive species

Imlay called on volunteers through last summer to help fight back against

The Bay Journal is published by the Alliance for the Chesapeake Bay for the Chesapeake Bay Program.

 

By Karl Blankenship

Three summers ago, when Marc Imlay and a small band of volunteers were yanking unwanted plants in a local park, they stumbled across something they had never seen before: a deep green grass with rippling waves across its blades.

In later visits to Little Paint Branch Park in Maryland's Prince George's County, they noticed the grass was quickly blanketing the area. "We knew there was something wrong," said Imlay, conservation biologist with the Anacostia Watershed Society, who gathered samples for botanists to identify.

In late 2006, he got his answer: It was wavyleaf basketgrass, a species native to southeast Asia.

It was first seen in the United States only a decade before-an amateur botanist, Ed Uebel, spotted a few small patches in 1996 in Patapsco Valley State Park, about 20 miles from where Imlay had found it.

Imlay's worries that the plant was not only exotic, but highly invasive, were confirmed last summer when Kerrie Kyde, the invasive plant specialist with the Maryland Department of Natural Resources, revisited Patapsco.

The small patches observed by Uebel now blanketed more than 150 acres. "It is kind of mind-boggling," Kyde said. "It looks like somebody rolled out the Astroturf."

Based on its rapid spread, botanists fear that it could rapidly replace native plants, turning forest floors into monocultures with little habitat value for other species throughout the region.

But instead of wavyleaf basketgrass being the latest invasive species to roll across the landscape-as has been the case with everything from kudzu and mile-a-minute to gypsy moths and snakeheads-Imlay and Kyde think they have a shot at driving the plant from its beachhead in North America.

"So far, it is only found in Maryland," Imlay said. "We have a realistic chance of saving what will otherwise destroy 10 percent of the herbaceous layer of one fourth of the United States."

If that happens, it would be a remarkable accomplishment. Although efforts have succeeded in removing problematic species from local areas, such as parks, examples of removing an invasive species from the continent are rare.

"I'd be hard-pressed to pick one out and point at it," said Alan Tasker, the federal noxious weed coordinator at the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Animal and Plant Heath Inspection Service, which is charged with keeping harmful pests out of the country. "This would be one of the few citable examples."

Right now, the plant has only been spotted in a handful of locations, which also include the Liberty Reservoir and Hernwood Landfill in Baltimore County.

And in one location, wavyleaf basketgrass has nearly been eradicated. Imlay called on volunteers through last summer to help fight back against the plant in Little Paint Branch Park, including at one point assembling an international crew from the World Bank. "I wanted to teach people so they would realize that when something first hits on their own continent, that is the time to get it," he said.

Altogether, Imlay led more than a dozen trips to the park in 2007, with scores of volunteers racking up more than 400 hours spraying and pulling wavyleaf basketgrass, which had spread over roughly three acres. By year's end, they had knocked it back by about 80 percent.

Imlay is seeking volunteers to finish off the plant in the park this spring, and more volunteers are queuing up for the fight. He said the Maryland Chapter of the Sierra Club is pledging 325 volunteer hours toward eradicating the plant.

Meanwhile, members of the Montgomery County "Weed Warriors" are being trained to identify the plant. "This year," he said, "the idea is to scout farther in all directions and remove it where we see it."

Nonetheless, ridding the plant will be no easy task, especially in Patapsco Valley State Park where it already blankets more than a quarter-square-mile of territory.

Kyde said the plant is too widespread to be eradicated in a single year. So, while volunteers will be working to control the plant, other efforts will go into precisely mapping known locations, understanding the plant's biology and determining the most effective herbicides to use against it.

"I suspect this is easily a three-year effort and maybe five," Kyde said. "And I would want to monitor for five or 10 years thereafter."

The maps will help botanists identify-and get rid of-any pockets that spread beyond the boundaries of current patches, thereby containing the invasion.

The plant has two ways to spread. Its stems can grow horizontally along the ground and root at the lower stem nodes. And, when it blooms from mid-September through November, it grows seed-bearing spikelets. The spikelets have long pointed bristle-like awns that produce a sticky substance that readily attaches the seeds to anything which may brush past. "It's about the stickiest thing I've ever come across," Imlay said.

To limit the spread, removal priority is likely to be given to areas along paths, Kyde said. But people may not be the only way to move seeds around. "I believe the deer are a major vector," she added, noting that people have reported seeing deer legs covered with awns and seeds. "That's bad news."

The plant is native to India and Southeast Asia. It is also found in Italy, although it's not clear whether it is native to Italy or was imported, Kyde said.

It's not clear how the plant got to Maryland, but because one of its known locations was near a landfill, Kyde said it's possible the plant was being disposed of, although this particular subspecies is not typically sold in the United States.

Tasker said the USDA is reviewing whether the subspecies should be listed as a noxious weed, which would prevent its importation into the United States and transport across state lines.

While the wavyleaf basketgrass has been in Maryland for nearly a decade, it's still considered an early discovery relative to other species, which are often more widespread before they are noticed. "You often don't find out about it until it is too late to be able to take it out," Tasker said.

He said one of the lessons from the wavyleaf basketgrass experience is the value of citizen efforts, like those by Imlay, who work to control other invasive species in their local area. "Most people don't know their surroundings like they used to," he said. "They don't know what belongs or doesn't belong in an area. They just think, 'Oh it's green, so it's good.'"

As Kyde and Imlay work to assemble volunteers, funding-and a plan-to control the plant, it could serve as a model for others of how early detection of an invasive plant, followed by a coordinated rapid response effort, can remove a species before it becomes problematic.

Although such efforts are generally considered critical to controlling invasive species, discoveries are often too late, or funding is lacking to fight the invaders-the USDA has only about $1.5 million nationwide to support such efforts.

"We are going to learn an awful lot through this infestation," Kyde said. "This is going to be extremely valuable in formulating how people might handle the same kind of incident with other species."

It would also show that such efforts are worth the investment, Tasker said. "One of the difficulties is coming up with success stories that we can point to," he said.

For information about the wavyleaf basketgrass, including information about identification and reporting sightings, visit www.dnr.state.md.us/wildlife/wl_basketgrass.asp. Anyone interested in participating in eradication efforts can contact Marc Imlay at marc@... or Kerrie Kyde at 410-260-8534, 1-877-620-8DNR x8367 (TTY users dial 711) or KKyde@....

Wavyleaf Basketgrass

Wavyleaf basketgrass is a low-lying, trailing perennial grass. Its flat leaf blades are about 0.5- to 1-inch wide and 1.5 to 4 inches long and have elongated pointed tips. There are rippling waves across the deep green grass blades, as though the tide were coming into shore along the leaves.

The leaf sheaths and stems are noticeably hairy, although the hairs are very short.

When the plant blooms, from mid-September through November, the grass spikelets have glumes (lower bracts) with very long awns (extended pointed tips). The awns produce a sticky substance that allows the grass seed to adhere to and be dispersed by passing animals or the pants of humans. It also spreads by branching and rooting at nodes along creeping stems called stolons.

- From www.dnr.state.md.us/wildlife/wl_basketgrass.asp

Karl is the Editor of the Bay Journal.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Home | April 2008 | Wave bye-bye to wavyleaf basketgrass

Wave bye-bye to wavyleaf basketgrass

Early detection-and rapid response-provides hope for eradicating Asian plant in Maryland-a rare victory over an invasive species

 

 

Wavyleaf basketgrass When the plant blooms, from mid-September through November, the grass spikelets have lower bracts with very long awns (extended pointed tips).The plant's awns and seeds are sticky and easily adhere to pant legs. The stem, right, of the wavyleaf basketgrass has short but noticeably hairy stems.The plant is shade tolerant and evenly carpets a woodland floor.

By Karl Blankenship

 

 


#189 From: "abirome2000" <abirome@...>
Date: Fri May 30, 2008 2:21 pm
Subject: Natural History Tour of Cuba - November 2008
abirome2000
Send Email Send Email
 
I am the owner and manager of a small ecotourism consulting company and am organizing my fourth licensed tour of Cuba (i.e. permitted by the U.S. Treasury Department).

If you would like a flyer and more information, please let me know.


Join Us
on a
NATURAL HISTORY TOUR of CUBA
November 1 – 10, 2008


For more information, contact Abi at abirome@...

#190 From: "Marc Imlay" <ialm@...>
Date: Sat Jul 12, 2008 1:40 pm
Subject: Mapping and Early Detection Rapid Response workshop
ialm@...
Send Email Send Email
 

 

 

Mapping and Early Detection Rapid Response. July 30, 2008. Hands on workshop for land managers and planners at Frying Pan Farm Park in Fairfax, Virginia.

 

For the annual Mid-Atlantic Exotic Pest Plant Council workshop it is recommended that attendees register by July 18 for the $55 early registration. www.ma-eppc.org. 

 

 

 

Mapping the Mid-Atlantic:

Creating a Consistent Early Detection—Rapid Response System for Invasive Exotic Species

 

8:00 am     Registration

8:30 am     Welcome and introduction, housekeeping

                   Meghan Fellows, President, MA-EPPC

 

8:45           Carol Holko

                   Chief, Plant Protection and Weed Management

                   Maryland Department of Agriculture

                   EDRR: Lessons from the Emerald Ash Borer Experience

                        Introduced into Maryland illegally in 2003 on infested nursery stock, EAB presented a significant threat to Maryland’s forests, both natural and plantation, and for nursery production of ash trees.  MDA’s PPWM section organized and implemented an EDRR plan unprecedented in Maryland.  Ms. Holko will share lessons from her experience managing this effort, including the importance of prevention, the value of mapping an outbreak and how to do it, and the issues presented in bringing together the right team for the job.

                                                                                     

9:30                                                                               Break

 

9:45            Kristin Sewak
                   Director
                   Natural Biodiversity

                   Ranking Invasive Plants: Case Studies and Customization

                        A look at existing ranking systems, how land managers can customize the principles within those based on their specific management goals and geographic areas, and a guide to the key questions to ask as a first step in developing their ranking methodology.

 

10:15                   Mary Travaglini
                   Potomac Gorge Habitat Restoration Manager
                   The Nature Conservancy of MD/DC
                    Assessing Risk for Invasive Plants--Not so Complicated After All

 

10:45         Panel (of Speakers): Questions: How to determine criteria associated with an EDRR? What is NEW? What is an important movement? What is a routine movement? How many times must a record appear for it to be established?

 

11:15         Chuck Bargeron and David Moorhead

                   Information Technology Director; Co-Director

                   Center for Invasive Species and Ecosystem Health

                   University of Georgia 

                   EDDMaps

                   What is it, how does it work, who can use it, when is it used, why was it developed?

 

12:15         Lunch

 

1:00           Small group workshop problem set and GPS tasks

                   Organization or break-out groups and distribution

  

2:00 to 2:30        (Depending on group activities and areas covered) Whole group feedback

                   EDDMaps in action in real time

 

3:00 or 3:30       Facilitated Panel, Jil Swearingen, National Park Service (Bugwood and Invited MA-EPPC Board Members)

                   EDRR for Mid-Atlantic brainstorming session

                   Questions: What do we need to do to make this happen? What are next steps? How do we identify the experts? How do we fund this (initially and maintenance)?

 

4:30           Closing Remarks (Meghan Fellows)

 

5:30            Annual Board Meeting and dinner

 


#191 From: mary bennett <aussiemarie@...>
Date: Mon Oct 13, 2008 3:25 pm
Subject: Ride wanted
aussiemarie
Send Email Send Email
 
Looking for a ride from Nashville on Friday Oct 17 to western NC, Franklin (Macon County).
It is on the way to Asheville NC,


#192 From: "Marc Imlay" <ialm@...>
Date: Sun Oct 19, 2008 4:40 pm
Subject: Forests and health. No child left inside.
ialm@...
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On page 20-21 of the current Wilderness Society magazine that I just
received there is an article about recent scientific studies that showed
reduction in blood pressure, diabetes and cancer by walking in old growth
broad leaf forest:

"In their experiments, the Japanese scientists uncovered hard evidence that
walking in the forest decreases the blood glucose levels of diabetic
patients and that people who view forest scenery for 20 minutes have a 13
percent lower blood concentration of the stress hormone cortisol than people
viewing urban settings. They have revealed that forest walking compared with
city walking boosts the activity of natural killer cells, immune cells that
fight cancer- an effect that may last for as long as 30 days. And in 2008,
they reported that people living in areas with a higher percentage of forest
cover had lower mortality rates for cancers of the lung, breast, uterus,
prostate, kidney, and colon, compared with people living in areas with
lighter forest cover, even after factoring in socioeconomic status."

It is not up on the www.wilderness.org website yet. Cheers.

Marc

#193 From: "Marc Imlay" <ialm@...>
Date: Fri Oct 24, 2008 10:38 am
Subject: FW: Forests and health. No child left inside.
ialm@...
Send Email Send Email
 

Abstract The physiological effects of “Shinrin-yoku” (taking

in the atmosphere of the forest) were examined by

investigating blood pressure, pulse rate, heart rate variability

(HRV), salivary cortisol concentration, and immunoglobulin A

concentration in saliva. Subjective feelings of being

“comfortable”, “calm”, and “refreshed” were also assessed by

questionnaire. The subjects were 12 male university students

aged from 21 to 23 (meanSD: 22.01.0). The physiological

measurements were conducted six times, i.e., in the morning

and evening before meals at the place of accommodation,

before and after the subjects walked a predetermined course in

the forest and city areas for 15 minutes, and before and after

they sat still on a chair watching the scenery in the respective

areas for 15 minutes. The findings were as follows. In the

forest area compared to the city area, 1) blood pressure and

pulse rate were significantly lower, and 2) the power of the HF

component of the HRV tended to be higher and LF/(LF[1]HF)

tended to be lower. Also, 3) salivary cortisol concentration was

significantly lower in the forest area. These physiological

responses suggest that sympathetic nervous activity was

suppressed and parasympathetic nervous activity was enhanced

in the forest area, and that “Shinrin-yoku” reduced stress

levels. In the subjective evaluation, 4) “comfortable”, “calm”,

and “refreshed” feelings were significantly higher in the forest

area. The present study has, by conducting physiological

investigations with subjective evaluations as supporting

evidence, demonstrated the relaxing and stress-relieving effects

of “Shinrin-yoku”. J Physiol Anthropol 26(2): 135–142, 2007

http://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/browse/jpa2

[DOI: 10.2114/jpa2.26.135]

Keywords: therapeutic effect of forest, natural environment,

heart rate variability, salivary cortisol, relaxation

Introduction

Stress control is one of the most important issues

confronting modern society. As reflected by the word

“Technostress”, coined by Brod in 1984, modern society is

becoming more complicated and highly industrialized,

consequently causing many stress-related disorders.

In “stressful” daily life, it is a common experience that

contact with the natural environment or natural objects

provides a feeling of relaxation or a release from tension. A

study conducted by Lohr et al. (1996) is considered to give

strong support to this contention. They clarified that plants in a

windowless office environment contributed to an improvement

in worker productivity. The authors have tried to examine the

pleasant feelings that natural objects induce in humans by

conducting physiological investigations. From studies dealing

with the five senses separately, we have clarified that the smell

of Japanese cedar wood lowered blood pressure and regional

cerebral blood flow in the prefrontal area (Miyazaki et al.,

1999), and the sound of murmuring water lowered blood

pressure (Mishima et al., 2004). As Frumkin (2001) showed

that a deep-seated connection between the natural world and

humans was unsurprising from an evolutionary perspective, we

assume that human physiological functions have had to adapt

to the natural environment; thus, it is somehow a stressor to

live in modern “artificial” society. It should be natural for

people, having this background, to feel a sense of comfort or

affinity with the natural environment.

Frumkin (2001) also pointed out that certain kinds of

contact with the natural world could enhance human health.

Animals, plants, landscapes, and wilderness experience were

cited as components of the natural world that can function to

enhance health. As one example of the clinical trials

conducted, Urlich (1984) did a remarkable study. He examined

Physiological Effects of Shinrin-yoku (Taking in the Atmosphere of

the Forest) in an Old-Growth Broadleaf Forest

in Yamagata Prefecture, Japan

Yuko Tsunetsugu1), Bum-Jin Park1), Hideki Ishii2), Hideki Hirano3),

Takahide Kagawa1) and Yoshifumi Miyazaki1)

1) Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute

2) Graduate School of the University of Tokyo

3) Ministry of the Environment

 

records on the recovery of patients in a hospital for 10 years

and found that patients with tree views had shorter

hospitalizations compared to patients with brick-wall views. In

the field of environmental health, the natural environment is

now seen as one of the factors which have an impact on human

health, not in the traditional context of causing harm by

exposure to environmental toxins, but from the viewpoint of

potentially enhancing our well-being through daily exposure to

the natural environment (Frumkin et al., 2002). Through these

previous studies, it has been confirmed that the natural

environment has a definite beneficial effect on humans.

“Shinrin-yoku” is a word coined by the Forestry Agency of the

Japanese government in 1982 to encourage utilization of

national forests for enhancement of physical and mental health.

It is a compound word made up of two independent words

meaning “forest” and “bathing”. Like sea bathing, to be in the

forest environment and take in the atmosphere of the forest in

expectation of a potential curative or therapeutic effect is

probably what the word “Shinrin-yoku” intends to convey.

Thus, from this perspective, the effect of “Shinrin-yoku”

should be considered as non-specific.

Though it would be reasonable to expect that “Shinrinyoku”

has beneficial effects on human physiology, there have

only been a few studies that have attempted to prove this

through on-site experiments. Ohtsuka et al. (1998) found that

the mean blood glucose level of diabetic patients significantly

decreased after “Shinrin-yoku” (walking 3 km to 6 km in the

forest). Ohira et al. (1999) examined the immunological and

endocrine indices, EEG, and ECG of twenty undergraduates in

a forest environment and in a non-forest environment. Their

main finding was that NK cell activity and immunoglobulin A,

G, and M were significantly increased after staying 8 hours in a

forest environment. There were no significant differences

between the forest and non-forest environments in terms of

their effects on the other physiological parameters or

psychological states (anxiety, mood, and subjective stress).

They pointed out the necessity of further studies, adding that

the bad weather and low temperature on the day of their

experiment might have reduced the pleasantness of “Shinrinyoku”.

The previous studies dealt with the effects that occurred over

a period of one day. However, in our previous studies, as

mentioned before (Miyazaki et al., 1999; Mishima et al.,

2004), changes in physiological parameters by the inhalation of

wood odor or the sound of murmuring water were observed

within 60 to 90 seconds. Though these were the results of

laboratory experiments, it can be expected that the impacts of

“Shinrin-yoku” on physiological response would be obtained

in a shorter time.

The aim of the present study was to clarify the effect of

“Shinrin-yoku” as a daily activity on healthy subjects. From

the viewpoint of preventive medicine or health maintenance,

“Shinrin-yoku” should be accessible and easy to implement.

Thus it was our intention to assess a program that included

activities of short duration. The evaluation was attempted by

measuring various parameters of autonomic nervous activity,

the endocrine system, and the immunological system.

Subjective feeling was also assessed using a questionnaire. The

experiment reported in the present paper was conducted as part

of a large-scale ongoing investigation on “Shinrin-yoku” in

Japan.

Materials and Methods

The experiment was conducted in a deciduous broadleaf

forest mainly consisting of old-growth beech in Nukumidaira

(Oguni, Yamagata, Japan) on the 28th and 29th of July, 2005.

For comparison, an area around Niigata Station (Niigata,

Japan) was used. The two experimental sites are shown on the

map in Figure 1. Hereinafter, the two sites are referred to as the

forest area and the city area (Fig. 2). The weather was fine in

both areas and the average temperature and relative humidity

was 23.5°C and 73.4% in the forest area and 26.4°C and

62.1% in the city area, respectively.

The subjects were 12 male university students aged from 21

to 23 (meanSD: 22.01.0). The subjects were assembled in

the afternoon on the day before the experiment. Sufficient

information on the aim and process of the experiment was

provided and written informed consent was obtained. The

study was performed under the regulations of the Institutional

Review Committee of the Forest and Forest Products Research

Institute of Japan. After a brief orientation, the subjects

previewed the experimental sites in the forest and the city

areas. Then a measurement practice was conducted at a place

of accommodation, which was located at approximately the

same distance (about 60 minutes by car) from both

136 Physiological Effects of Shinrin-yoku

Fig. 1 Location of the experimental sites.

 

experimental sites. Each subject stayed in a single room in the

hotel and all subjects had the same meals until the end of the

experiment.

The subjects were divided randomly into two groups

consisting of six people each. On the first day of the

experiment, one group was sent to the forest area, and the other

was sent to the city area. On the second day, each group went

to the other area to eliminate the order effect.

In the morning, each group was taken to the experimental

site and rested for a while in a nearby resting room. In the

forenoon, the subjects walked a predetermined course in each

area at an unhurried pace for 15 minutes. In the afternoon,

after taking lunch in the resting room, they sat on chairs

watching the scenery in each area for 15 minutes. The subjects

engaged in the walking and watching individually.

Physiological measurements were conducted six times a

day: (i) in the morning at the place of accommodation before

breakfast (06:15–07:15); (ii) before walking (10:40–11:30);

(iii) after walking (11:00–11:50); (iv) before watching (14:10–

15:00); (v) after watching (14:30–15:20); (vi) in the evening at

the place of accommodation before dinner (18:00–19:00). The

R-R interval was measured continuously during the walking

and watching in addition to these six specific measurement

times.

The measured physiological parameters were the R-R

interval of the electrocardiogram to analyze heart rate

variability (HRV), systolic and diastolic blood pressure, pulse

rate, salivary cortisol concentration, and secretory

immunoglobulin A (s-IgA) concentration in saliva. R-R

intervals were obtained by an ambulatory electrocardiogram

monitor (Active Tracer AC301A, GMS Corporation). They

were measured over 2 minutes during the resting state with

eyes closed in the morning and the evening, and before and

after walking and watching. R-R intervals were also taken

continuously for 15 minutes during walking and watching.

Systolic and diastolic blood pressure, and pulse rate were

measured by a digital blood pressure monitor using

oscillometric methods (HEM1000, Omron) on the right upper

arm. Saliva for analysis of cortisol and s-IgA was collected

using Salivette devices over a two-minute period. The saliva

samples were frozen after collection and subsequently

analyzed by SRL, Inc. In addition to the physiological

measurements, subjective “comfortable-uncomfortable” and

“calm-roused” feelings were estimated using a 13-point scale.

“Refreshed” feeling was measured with the Stress–Refresh

feeling test (Mackay et al., 1978). These subjective tests using

the questionnaire were also carried out six times a day at the

time of the physiological measurements.

R–R interval data were analyzed by the maximum entropy

method (Memcalc, GMS, Ohtomo et al., 1994). The power of

the low-frequency (LF; 0.04–0.15 Hz) component and the

high-frequency (HF; 0.15–0.4 Hz) component of the obtained

heart rate power spectrum were calculated for each minute. It

is considered that HF reflects parasympathetic nervous activity

and LF/(LF[1]HF) reflects sympathetic nervous activity. A

paired t-test was used to compare the physiological data

between the forest area and the city area. The Wilcoxon signed

rank test was used to compare the data on subjective feelings.

All statistical analysis was performed using StatView version

5.0 (SAS Institute Inc). p


0.05 was considered to be

significant.

Results

Subjective “comfortable” feelings in the forest area and the

city area at each measurement time are shown in Figure 3. The

forest area was evaluated as producing significantly more

comfortable feelings before and after walking (p


0.05) and

after being seated and watching (p


0.01) than the city area

did. By comparing before and after watching, it was clarified

that watching scenery in the forest area significantly increased

feelings of comfort (p


0.05) while activities in the city area

significantly decreased feelings of comfort (p


0.05 when

walking, p


0.01 when watching). Figure 4 shows the results

for a “calm” feeling in the forest and city areas. The forest area

was rated as producing significantly calmer feelings after

walking and watching than the city area did (p


0.05, p
0.01,

Tsunetsugu, Y et al. J Physiol Anthropol, 26: 135–142, 2007 137

Fig. 2 The scenery in the two experimental sites.

upper: Forest area lower: City area.

 

respectively). As in the case of a “comfortable” feeling,

watching in the forest area significantly enhanced the feeling

of calm (p


0.05), whereas the activities in the city

environment lowered this feeling (p


0.01 when walking,

p


0.05 when watching). Figure 5 shows the scores for a

“refreshed” feeling as gauged by the Stress–Refresh test. The

score was significantly higher in the forest area than in the city

area before and after walking and before and after watching

(p


0.05 before and after walking, and before watching,

p


0.01 after watching). Significant differences between before

and after the activities were only observed for the city area,

i.e., the city area caused a significant decrease in feeling

refreshed (p


0.05).

Figure 6 shows the mean value of systolic blood pressure in

each experimental site at each measurement time. Systolic

blood pressure was significantly lower in the forest area before

walking (p


0.05) and before (p
0.01) and after (p
0.05)

watching than in the city area. Figure 7 shows diastolic blood

pressure in the same sequence as systolic blood pressure.

Diastolic blood pressures showed significantly lower values in

the forest area before walking (p


0.05) and after watching

(p


0.01). In a comparison between before and after, diastolic

blood pressure decreased following walking in the city area

(p


0.05) and watching scenery in the forest area (p
0.05).

Figure 8 shows the change in the pulse rate. There was an

overall tendency for the pulse rate to be lower in the forest area

138 Physiological Effects of Shinrin-yoku

Fig. 3 Subjective comfortable feeling measured by questionnaire at six

measurement times in the forest area and in the city area.

N


9 at “Before walking” and “After walking”, N
11 at the other

times. *: p


0.05, **: p
0.01 by Wilcoxon signed rank test.

Fig. 4 Subjective calm feeling measured by questionnaire at six

measurement times in the forest area and in the city area.

N


9 at “Before walking” and “After walking”, N
11 at the other

times. *: p


0.05, **: p
0.01 by Wilcoxon signed rank test.

Fig. 5 Subjective refreshed feeling measured by the Stress–Refresh

feeling test at six measurement times in the forest area and in the city

area.

N


9 at “Before walking” and “After walking”, N
11 at the other

times. *: p


0.05, **: p
0.01 by Wilcoxon signed rank test.

Fig. 6 Changes in systolic blood pressure determined at six

measurement times in the forest area and in the city area.

N


9 at “Before walking” and “After walking”, N
11 at the other

times. *: p


0.05, **: p
0.01 by paired t-test.

Fig. 7 Changes in diastolic blood pressure determined at six

measurement times in the forest area and in the city area.

N


9 at “Before walking” and “After walking”, N
11 at the other

times. *: p


0.05, **: p
0.01 by paired t-test.

 

than in the city area except in the morning, and a significant

difference between the two sites was observed before walking.

Though it did not reach a significant level, the p-value was less

than 0.06 after walking and in the evening. Pulse rate

significantly decreased as a result of watching scenery in the

city area (p


0.01).

To assess the activity in the autonomic nervous system

separately from sympathetic nervous activity and

parasympathetic nervous activity, we investigated HRV by

means of frequency analysis of the R–R interval. Figure 9

shows the minute-by-minute change in the power of the HF

component of HRV over time. The data sequence is as follows:

morning (at the place of accommodation), before, during and

after walking, before, during and after watching, and evening

(at the place of accommodation). The HF power tended to be

higher in the forest area overall during walking. A significant

difference between the forest area and the city area was

observed at the 1st (p


0.01), 9th (p
0.05), and 15th

(p


0.05) minute during watching. Though the HF power

tended to be higher in the forest area than in the city area

before and after walking and watching, it did not reach a

significant difference (p-value was less than 0.06 at the 1st

minute in the measurement before walking and at the 2nd

minute after watching). Figure 10 shows the variation in

LF/(LF[1]HF) over time. The value in the forest area was

significantly lower at the 2nd (p


0.05) and 11th (p
0.05)

minute during walking and the 1st (p


0.05) and 9th (p
0.05)

minute during watching.

Tsunetsugu, Y et al. J Physiol Anthropol, 26: 135–142, 2007 139

Fig. 8 Changes in pulse determined at six measurement times in the

forest area and in the city area.

N


9 at “Before walking” and “After walking”, N
11 at the other

times. *: p


0.05, **: p
0.01 by paired t-test.

Fig. 9 Time-series change in the power of the HF component of HRV in the forest area and in the city area.

N


5–12, *: p
0.05, **: p
0.01 by paired t-test.

Fig. 10 Time-series change in LF/(LF[1]HF) of HRV in the forest area and in the city area.

N


5–12, *: p
0.05 by paired t-test.

 

Figure 11 shows the time course change in the salivary

cortisol concentration. As was already known, diurnal

variations where concentration is high in the morning and

tends to decrease as time progresses were observed in both

areas. Cortisol concentration was lower in the forest area than

in the city area at all measurement times, and there was a

significant difference between the two sites before and after

walking, and after watching (p


0.05). The p-value was less

than 0.06 before watching. The present study found no

significant difference in the s-IgA concentration. No significant

diurnal variation was found in the s-IgA concentration.

Discussion

The results for the forest area and the city area are

summarized in Table 1. No indices showed significant

differences between the forest area and the city area for the

measurements taken in the morning and the evening. The

differences were mainly observed before walking and after

being seated and watching the scenery, followed by after

walking, then before watching. All of the indices except s-IgA

were generally in excellent agreement with each other.

The results for the subjective evaluations showed that

walking around or watching the scenery in the forest area

created a feeling of comfort and calm. Feeling refreshed was

higher in the forest area both when walking and watching, and

both before and after the activities, which can be interpreted as

indicating that the forest environment itself induced the

refreshed feeling regardless of the kind of activity and the

measurement time.

The findings for blood pressure and pulse rate demonstrated

that activities in the forest area caused a relaxed physiological

state compared to the city area. The significant differences in

all of the three parameters (systolic and diastolic blood

pressure, and pulse rate) before walking suggest that the two

environments had already had different impacts on physiology

before activities commenced. The temperature in the period

10:00–12:00 was lower in the forest area (about 22–24°C in

the forest and 26–27°C in the city), and the forest area was felt

as significantly more “comfortable” and “refreshing” before

walking. The whole environment in the forest area was

considered to induce lower blood pressure and pulse rate. This

might also be affected by the fact that the subjects had stayed

in the forest environment for 1.5–2.5 hours from 9:00, which

corresponded to the measurement time of “before walking”.

The reason for no significant differences after walking seemed

to be that blood pressure and pulse rate tended to decrease (a

significant decrease in diastolic blood pressure) after walking

in the city area whereas they were rather stable in the forest

area. Since pulse rate did not increase, the 15-minute walking

conducted in the present study was assumed to be light

exercise for these subjects. It has been reported that moderate

140 Physiological Effects of Shinrin-yoku

Fig. 11 Changes in salivary cortisol concentration at six measurement

times in the forest area and in the city area.

N


9 at “Before walking” and “After walking”, N
11 at the other

times. *: p


0.05 by paired t-test.

Table 1 Summary of the comparison between the forest and city areas.

Physiological responses

Subjective feelings

Autonomic nervous system

Endocrine Immune

system system

Sys Dias Pulse

HF

LF/

BP BP Rate (LF[1]HF)

Cortisol s-IgA Comfort Calm Refreshed

Morning

Pre-walk F


C* F
C* F
C* F
C* F
C* FC* FC*

during

Post- walk walk F


C* FC* FC* FC*

Pre-watch F


C** FC* F
C* FC*

during during

Post-watch F


C* F
C** watch watch F
C* FC** FC* FC**

Evening

F: Forest area, C: City area, * indicates that significant differences were observed in the index at the 5% significance level, ** indicates that significant

differences were observed in the index at the 1% significance level.

 

exercise decreases blood pressure compared to the level before

exercise (Halliwill, 2001). The significant decrease in diastolic

blood pressure in the city area was hence considered to be the

effect of exercise. We assumed that diastolic blood pressure

was lowered already at the measurement time of “before

walking” in the forest area, so it did not decrease as a result of

walking. The significantly lower blood pressure after being

seated and watching the scenery in the forest area showed that

the activity had the effect of reducing stress. The fact that the

pulse rate of the subjects who returned from the forest in the

evening tended to be lower (p


0.06) might indicate that the

effect of “Shinrin-yoku” lasted for a certain amount of time.

The results for HRV showed that parasympathetic nervous

activity tended to be dominant in the forest area, which implies

that “Shinrin-yoku” had a relaxing effect. A rapid decrease in

HF when doing submaximal exercise (Yamamoto et al., 1991)

or ergometer exercise until exhaustion (Tabusadani et al.,

2001) has been reported in previous studies, but the decrease

in HF during walking in the city area in the present study was

not considered to be caused only by the exercise, since the

quantity of physical activity during walking calculated from

the acceleration of the subject was at the same level in each

area, and pulse rate did not show an increase after walking (the

exercise load was not as high as in previous studies). Thus the

decrease in HF components in the city area was also

considered to relate to the perceived mental stress (Dishman et

al., 2000; Hjortskov et al., 2004). From this point of view, the

relatively high HF in the forest area indicated a connection

with the subjective “comfortable” and “calm” feelings.

Recently, it was reported that soothing music caused a higher

HF component than stimulating music did (Iwanaga et al.,

2005), and that an increase in HF power was observed during

Zen meditation (Murata et al., 2004). The outcomes in the

present study are supportive of the results from those previous

studies. The effect of the environment was more significant

during watching. As the subjects sat still in a chair in both

areas, the results during watching can be inferred to have a

close association with the mood state. Parasympathetic

nervous activity was more dominant than in the period of

walking in both areas, and moreover, it was significantly more

dominant in the forest area than in the city area. The standard

deviation of HF power was larger in the forest area, possibly

because walking around or watching scenery in the city area

caused a stressed, heightened state equally in all subjects,

whereas the relaxing and calming effect of “Shinrin-yoku” was

more variable and depended to a certain extent on the

individual. Rosenwinkel et al. (2001) pointed out that HRV

may be more applicable to assessing parasympathetic nervous

activity than for assessing sympathetic function. In the present

study, the difference between the forest and city areas was not

as clear in LF/(LF[1]HF), but it can be supposed that

sympathetic nervous activity was more dominant in the city

area during walking and watching.

From the investigations of many previous studies

(Kirschbaum and Hellhammer, 1989; Ockenfels et al., 1995),

the result that cortisol concentration was significantly lower in

the forest area before and after walking, and after watching can

be interpreted as clearly demonstrating the relaxation effect of

“Shinrin-yoku”. O’Connor and Corrigan (1987) reported that a

significant increase in salivary cortisol was elicited by

submaximal exercise, while Jin (1989) found that moderate

exercise (practice of Tai Chi) decreased salivary cortisol levels.

The significant decrease after walking in the city area in the

present study might be attributable to the effect of the exercise.

The reason why there was no significant tendency toward an

increase or decrease in the IgA concentration in saliva in the

present study is unclear, and further consideration from the

viewpoint of individual variation, e.g., a connection with

personality (Ohira et al., 1999), or a relationship between kinds

of stress and the stress reaction mechanism (Fujiwara and

Yokoyama, 1990) is needed.

The responses in the parameter reflecting autonomic

nervous activity and cortisol concentration obviously

demonstrated that “Shinrin-yoku” in the forest was perceived

as a relaxing stimulation and caused an opposite response to

stress reaction through both the hypothalamus-pituitaryadrenal

cortex axis and the hypothalamus-sympathetic nervous

system-adrenal medulla axis. This idea is also supported by the

excellent agreement between the physiological responses and

the subjective ratings. It is considered that these results were

induced not by specific components in the forest, but by the

whole environment, including air, scenery, smell, sound, and

climatic conditions such as temperature.

In summary, in the forest area, 1) blood pressure and pulse

rate were significantly lower, and 2) the power of the HF

component tended to be higher and LF/(LF[1]HF) tended to be

lower. Also, 3) salivary cortisol concentration was significantly

lower in the forest area. The physiological responses suggest

that sympathetic nervous activity was suppressed and

parasympathetic nervous activity was enhanced in the forest

area, and “Shinrin-yoku” was responsible for reducing the

stress. In the subjective evaluation, 4) “comfortable”, “calm”,

and “refreshed” feelings were significantly higher in the forest

area. The relaxing effect of “Shinrin-yoku” was also felt

subjectively. In conclusion, the present study has proved the

relaxing and stress-relieving effects of “Shinrin-yoku” by

means of a physiological investigation, with subjective

evaluations providing supporting evidence.

Acknowledgements This study was supported partly by

Research Project for Utilizing Advanced Technologies in

Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, 2004 (1603) from the

Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, Forest

Therapeutic Effects Research Association, Grants-in-Aid for

Scientific Research (No. 16107007) from the Ministry of

Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology.

References

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Tsunetsugu, Y et al. J Physiol Anthropol, 26: 135–142, 2007 141

 

Computer Revolution. Addison-Wesley, Boston

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AL, Blair SN (2000) Heart rate variability, trait anxiety, and

perceived stress among physically fit men and women. Int J

Psychophysiol 37(2): 121–133

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natural environment. Am J Prev Med 20(3): 234–240

Frumkin H, Jackson RJ, Coussens CM (eds) (2002) Health and

the Environment in the Southeastern United States. The

National Academies Press, Washington, D.C

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response. Igaku no Ayumi 154(5–6) [In Japanese]

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post-exercise hypotension in humans. Exerc Sport Sci Rev

29(2): 65–70

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U, Sogaard K (2004) The effect of mental stress on heart

rate variability and blood pressure during computer work.

Eur J Appl Physiol 92(1–2): 84–89

Iwanaga M, Kobayashi A, Kawasaki C (2005) Heart rate

variability with repetitive exposure to music. Biol Psychol

70(1): 61–66

Jin P (1989) Changes in heart rate, noradrenaline, cortisol and

mood during Tai Chi. J Psychosom Res 33(2): 197–206

Kirschbaum C, Hellhammer DH (1989) Salivary

cortisol in psychobiological research: an overview.

Neuropsychobiology 22(3): 150–169

Lohr VI, Pearson-Mims CH, Goodwin GK (1996) Interior

plants may improve worker productivity and reduce stress in

a windowless environment. J environ hortic 14(2): 97–100

Macay C, Cox T, Buroows G, Lazzerini T (1978) An inventory

for the measurement of self-reported stress and arousal. Br J

Soc Clin Psychol 17: 283–284

Mishima R, Kudo T, Tsunetsugu Y, Miyazaki Y, Yamamura C,

Yamada Y (2004) Effects of sounds generated by a dental

turbine and a stream on regional cerebral blood flow and

cardiovascular responses. Odontology 92(1): 54–60

Miyazaki Y, Morikawa T, Yamamoto N (1999) Effect of

wooden odoriferous substances on humans. Appl Human

Sci 18(5): 189

Murata T, Takahashi T, Hamada T, Omori M, Kosaka H,

Yoshida H, Wada Y (2004) Individual trait anxiety levels

characterizing the properties of Zen meditation.

Neuropsychobiology 50(2): 189–194

Ockenfels MC, Porter L, Smyth J, Kirschbaum C, Hellhammer

DH, Stone AA (1995) Effect of chronic stress associated

with unemployment on salivary cortisol: overall cortisol

levels, diurnal rhythm, and acute stress reactivity.

Psychosom Med 57(5): 460–467

O’Connor PJ, Corrigan DL (1987) Influence of short-term

cycling on salivary cortisol levels. Med Sci Sports Exerc

19(3): 224–228

Ohira H, Watanabe Y, Kobayashi K, Kawai M (1999) The type

A behavior pattern and immune reactivity to brief stress:

change of volume of secretory immunoglobulin A in saliva.

Percept Mot Skills 89(2): 423–430

Ohira H, Takagi S, Mauis K, Oishi M, Obata A (1999) Effects

of shinrin-yoku (forest-air bathing and walking) on mental

and physical health. Tokai Women’s University Kiyou 19:

217–232 [In Japanese]

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(1994) New method of time series analysis and its

application to Wolf ’s sunspot number data. Jpn J Appl Phys

33: 2821–2831

Ohtsuka Y, Yabunaka N, Takayama S (1998) Shinrin-yoku

(forest-air bathing and walking) effectively decreases blood

glucose levels in diabetic patients. Int J Biometeorol 41(3):

125–127

Rosenwinkel ET, Bloomfield DM, Arwady MA, Goldsmith RL

(2001) Exercise and autonomic function in health and

cardiovascular disease. Cardiol Clin 19(3): 369–387

Tabusadani M, Hayashi Y, Sekikawa K, Kawaguchi K, Onari

K, Kobayashi K (2001) Relationship between heart rate

variability during execise and ventilatory threshold—

Assessment by MemCalc system—(first report). Jpn J Phys

Fitness Sports Med 50: 185–192 [In Japanese]

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recovery from surgery. Science 27; 224(4647): 420–421

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control of heart rate during exercise studied by heart rate

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1142

This article was presented at the 8th International Congress of

Physiological Anthropology, 2006 (ICPA 2006), in Kamakura,

Japan.

Received: September 30, 2006

Accepted: December 22, 2006

Correspondence to: Yuko Tsunetsugu, 1 Matsunosato,

Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305–8687, Japan

Phone: [1]83–29–829–8310

Fax: [1]83–29–874–3720

e-mail: yukot@...

142 Physiological Effects of Shinrin-yoku

 


From: Wildlife and Endangered Species Forum [mailto:CONS-WPST-WES-FORUM@...] On Behalf Of John
Sent: Thursday, October 23, 2008 8:48 AM
To: CONS-WPST-WES-FORUM@...
Subject: Re: Forests and health. No child left inside.

 

In Japan this thereapy is nothing new buit quite traditional in a country that, considering its population density, has a remarkable percentage of its land area under environmental protect, especially the forests.  It is called wood-air bathing (shin rin yoku) and can certainly be found on line.

 

JB

 

Tikkun olam.    Japan  Bike Riding 

----- Original Message -----

From: Jan Herzog

Sent: Thursday, October 23, 2008 6:55 AM

Subject: Re: Forests and health. No child left inside.

 

Marc,   My friend and fellow member of our local sierra group is working on her PhD in physchology and when I sent her this info she went crazy, said it's "pure gold" for her studies.  Since it's not online yet (I just looked and didn't find anything) would you mind sending us a copy of the article and the publication info so that she might use it?   If you are willing, you could send it to me - Jan Herzog, 3703 Seymour Rd., Wichita Falls, TX  76309.   Thanks, Jan


-----Original Message-----
From: Marc Imlay <ialm@...>
To: CONS-WPST-WES-FORUM@...
Sent: Sun, 19 Oct 2008 11:13 am
Subject: Forests and health. No child left inside.

On page 20-21 of the current Wilderness Society magazine that I just
received there is an article about recent scientific studies that showed
reduction in blood pressure, diabetes and cancer by walking in old growth
broad leaf forest:
 
"In their experiments, the Japanese scientists uncovered hard evidence that
walking in the forest decreases the blood glucose levels of diabetic
patients and that people who view forest scenery for 20 minutes have a 13
percent lower blood concentration of the stress hormone cortisol than people
viewing urban settings. They have revealed that forest walking compared with
city walking boosts the activity of natural killer cells, immune cells that
fight cancer- an effect that may last for as long as 30 days. And in 2008,
they reported that people living in areas with a higher percentage of forest
cover had lower mortality rates for cancers of the lung, breast, uterus,
prostate, kidney, and colon, compared with people living in areas with
lighter forest cover, even after factoring in socioeconomic status." 
 
It is not up on the www.wilderness.org website yet. Cheers. 
 
Marc 
 
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - To unsubscribe from the CONS-WPST-WES-FORUM list, send any message to: CONS-WPST-WES-FORUM-signoff-request@... Check out our Listserv Lists support site for more information: http://www.sierraclub.org/lists/faq.asp Sign up to receive Sierra Club Insider, the flagship e-newsletter. Sent out twice a month, it features the Club's latest news and activities. Subscribe and view recent editions at http://www.sierraclub.org/insider/
Abstract The physiological effects of “Shinrin-yoku” (taking
in the atmosphere of the forest) were examined by
investigating blood pressure, pulse rate, heart rate variability
(HRV), salivary cortisol concentration, and immunoglobulin A
concentration in saliva. Subjective feelings of being
“comfortable”, “calm”, and “refreshed” were also assessed by
questionnaire. The subjects were 12 male university students
aged from 21 to 23 (meanSD: 22.01.0). The physiological
measurements were conducted six times, i.e., in the morning
and evening before meals at the place of accommodation,
before and after the subjects walked a predetermined course in
the forest and city areas for 15 minutes, and before and after
they sat still on a chair watching the scenery in the respective
areas for 15 minutes. The findings were as follows. In the
forest area compared to the city area, 1) blood pressure and
pulse rate were significantly lower, and 2) the power of the HF
component of the HRV tended to be higher and LF/(LFHF)
tended to be lower. Also, 3) salivary cortisol concentration was
significantly lower in the forest area. These physiological
responses suggest that sympathetic nervous activity was
suppressed and parasympathetic nervous activity was enhanced
in the forest area, and that “Shinrin-yoku” reduced stress
levels. In the subjective evaluation, 4) “comfortable”, “calm”,
and “refreshed” feelings were significantly higher in the forest
area. The present study has, by conducting physiological
investigations with subjective evaluations as supporting
evidence, demonstrated the relaxing and stress-relieving effects
of “Shinrin-yoku”. J Physiol Anthropol 26(2): 135–142, 2007
http://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/browse/jpa2
[DOI: 10.2114/jpa2.26.135]
Keywords: therapeutic effect of forest, natural environment,
heart rate variability, salivary cortisol, relaxation
Introduction
Stress control is one of the most important issues
confronting modern society. As reflected by the word
“Technostress”, coined by Brod in 1984, modern society is
becoming more complicated and highly industrialized,
consequently causing many stress-related disorders.
In “stressful” daily life, it is a common experience that
contact with the natural environment or natural objects
provides a feeling of relaxation or a release from tension. A
study conducted by Lohr et al. (1996) is considered to give
strong support to this contention. They clarified that plants in a
windowless office environment contributed to an improvement
in worker productivity. The authors have tried to examine the
pleasant feelings that natural objects induce in humans by
conducting physiological investigations. From studies dealing
with the five senses separately, we have clarified that the smell
of Japanese cedar wood lowered blood pressure and regional
cerebral blood flow in the prefrontal area (Miyazaki et al.,
1999), and the sound of murmuring water lowered blood
pressure (Mishima et al., 2004). As Frumkin (2001) showed
that a deep-seated connection between the natural world and
humans was unsurprising from an evolutionary perspective, we
assume that human physiological functions have had to adapt
to the natural environment; thus, it is somehow a stressor to
live in modern “artificial” society. It should be natural for
people, having this background, to feel a sense of comfort or
affinity with the natural environment.
Frumkin (2001) also pointed out that certain kinds of
contact with the natural world could enhance human health.
Animals, plants, landscapes, and wilderness experience were
cited as components of the natural world that can function to
enhance health. As one example of the clinical trials
conducted, Urlich (1984) did a remarkable study. He examined
Physiological Effects of Shinrin-yoku (Taking in the Atmosphere of
the Forest) in an Old-Growth Broadleaf Forest
in Yamagata Prefecture, Japan
Yuko Tsunetsugu1), Bum-Jin Park1), Hideki Ishii2), Hideki Hirano3),
Takahide Kagawa1) and Yoshifumi Miyazaki1)
1) Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute
2) Graduate School of the University of Tokyo
3) Ministry of the Environment

records on the recovery of patients in a hospital for 10 years
and found that patients with tree views had shorter
hospitalizations compared to patients with brick-wall views. In
the field of environmental health, the natural environment is
now seen as one of the factors which have an impact on human
health, not in the traditional context of causing harm by
exposure to environmental toxins, but from the viewpoint of
potentially enhancing our well-being through daily exposure to
the natural environment (Frumkin et al., 2002). Through these
previous studies, it has been confirmed that the natural
environment has a definite beneficial effect on humans.
“Shinrin-yoku” is a word coined by the Forestry Agency of the
Japanese government in 1982 to encourage utilization of
national forests for enhancement of physical and mental health.
It is a compound word made up of two independent words
meaning “forest” and “bathing”. Like sea bathing, to be in the
forest environment and take in the atmosphere of the forest in
expectation of a potential curative or therapeutic effect is
probably what the word “Shinrin-yoku” intends to convey.
Thus, from this perspective, the effect of “Shinrin-yoku”
should be considered as non-specific.
Though it would be reasonable to expect that “Shinrinyoku”
has beneficial effects on human physiology, there have
only been a few studies that have attempted to prove this
through on-site experiments. Ohtsuka et al. (1998) found that
the mean blood glucose level of diabetic patients significantly
decreased after “Shinrin-yoku” (walking 3 km to 6 km in the
forest). Ohira et al. (1999) examined the immunological and
endocrine indices, EEG, and ECG of twenty undergraduates in
a forest environment and in a non-forest environment. Their
main finding was that NK cell activity and immunoglobulin A,
G, and M were significantly increased after staying 8 hours in a
forest environment. There were no significant differences
between the forest and non-forest environments in terms of
their effects on the other physiological parameters or
psychological states (anxiety, mood, and subjective stress).
They pointed out the necessity of further studies, adding that
the bad weather and low temperature on the day of their
experiment might have reduced the pleasantness of “Shinrinyoku”.
The previous studies dealt with the effects that occurred over
a period of one day. However, in our previous studies, as
mentioned before (Miyazaki et al., 1999; Mishima et al.,
2004), changes in physiological parameters by the inhalation of
wood odor or the sound of murmuring water were observed
within 60 to 90 seconds. Though these were the results of
laboratory experiments, it can be expected that the impacts of
“Shinrin-yoku” on physiological response would be obtained
in a shorter time.
The aim of the present study was to clarify the effect of
“Shinrin-yoku” as a daily activity on healthy subjects. From
the viewpoint of preventive medicine or health maintenance,
“Shinrin-yoku” should be accessible and easy to implement.
Thus it was our intention to assess a program that included
activities of short duration. The evaluation was attempted by
measuring various parameters of autonomic nervous activity,
the endocrine system, and the immunological system.
Subjective feeling was also assessed using a questionnaire. The
experiment reported in the present paper was conducted as part
of a large-scale ongoing investigation on “Shinrin-yoku” in
Japan.
Materials and Methods
The experiment was conducted in a deciduous broadleaf
forest mainly consisting of old-growth beech in Nukumidaira
(Oguni, Yamagata, Japan) on the 28th and 29th of July, 2005.
For comparison, an area around Niigata Station (Niigata,
Japan) was used. The two experimental sites are shown on the
map in Figure 1. Hereinafter, the two sites are referred to as the
forest area and the city area (Fig. 2). The weather was fine in
both areas and the average temperature and relative humidity
was 23.5°C and 73.4% in the forest area and 26.4°C and
62.1% in the city area, respectively.
The subjects were 12 male university students aged from 21
to 23 (meanSD: 22.01.0). The subjects were assembled in
the afternoon on the day before the experiment. Sufficient
information on the aim and process of the experiment was
provided and written informed consent was obtained. The
study was performed under the regulations of the Institutional
Review Committee of the Forest and Forest Products Research
Institute of Japan. After a brief orientation, the subjects
previewed the experimental sites in the forest and the city
areas. Then a measurement practice was conducted at a place
of accommodation, which was located at approximately the
same distance (about 60 minutes by car) from both
136 Physiological Effects of Shinrin-yoku
Fig. 1 Location of the experimental sites.

experimental sites. Each subject stayed in a single room in the
hotel and all subjects had the same meals until the end of the
experiment.
The subjects were divided randomly into two groups
consisting of six people each. On the first day of the
experiment, one group was sent to the forest area, and the other
was sent to the city area. On the second day, each group went
to the other area to eliminate the order effect.
In the morning, each group was taken to the experimental
site and rested for a while in a nearby resting room. In the
forenoon, the subjects walked a predetermined course in each
area at an unhurried pace for 15 minutes. In the afternoon,
after taking lunch in the resting room, they sat on chairs
watching the scenery in each area for 15 minutes. The subjects
engaged in the walking and watching individually.
Physiological measurements were conducted six times a
day: (i) in the morning at the place of accommodation before
breakfast (06:15–07:15); (ii) before walking (10:40–11:30);
(iii) after walking (11:00–11:50); (iv) before watching (14:10–
15:00); (v) after watching (14:30–15:20); (vi) in the evening at
the place of accommodation before dinner (18:00–19:00). The
R-R interval was measured continuously during the walking
and watching in addition to these six specific measurement
times.
The measured physiological parameters were the R-R
interval of the electrocardiogram to analyze heart rate
variability (HRV), systolic and diastolic blood pressure, pulse
rate, salivary cortisol concentration, and secretory
immunoglobulin A (s-IgA) concentration in saliva. R-R
intervals were obtained by an ambulatory electrocardiogram
monitor (Active Tracer AC301A, GMS Corporation). They
were measured over 2 minutes during the resting state with
eyes closed in the morning and the evening, and before and
after walking and watching. R-R intervals were also taken
continuously for 15 minutes during walking and watching.
Systolic and diastolic blood pressure, and pulse rate were
measured by a digital blood pressure monitor using
oscillometric methods (HEM1000, Omron) on the right upper
arm. Saliva for analysis of cortisol and s-IgA was collected
using Salivette devices over a two-minute period. The saliva
samples were frozen after collection and subsequently
analyzed by SRL, Inc. In addition to the physiological
measurements, subjective “comfortable-uncomfortable” and
“calm-roused” feelings were estimated using a 13-point scale.
“Refreshed” feeling was measured with the Stress–Refresh
feeling test (Mackay et al., 1978). These subjective tests using
the questionnaire were also carried out six times a day at the
time of the physiological measurements.
R–R interval data were analyzed by the maximum entropy
method (Memcalc, GMS, Ohtomo et al., 1994). The power of
the low-frequency (LF; 0.04–0.15 Hz) component and the
high-frequency (HF; 0.15–0.4 Hz) component of the obtained
heart rate power spectrum were calculated for each minute. It
is considered that HF reflects parasympathetic nervous activity
and LF/(LFHF) reflects sympathetic nervous activity. A
paired t-test was used to compare the physiological data
between the forest area and the city area. The Wilcoxon signed
rank test was used to compare the data on subjective feelings.
All statistical analysis was performed using StatView version
5.0 (SAS Institute Inc). p0.05 was considered to be
significant.
Results
Subjective “comfortable” feelings in the forest area and the
city area at each measurement time are shown in Figure 3. The
forest area was evaluated as producing significantly more
comfortable feelings before and after walking (p0.05) and
after being seated and watching (p0.01) than the city area
did. By comparing before and after watching, it was clarified
that watching scenery in the forest area significantly increased
feelings of comfort (p0.05) while activities in the city area
significantly decreased feelings of comfort (p0.05 when
walking, p0.01 when watching). Figure 4 shows the results
for a “calm” feeling in the forest and city areas. The forest area
was rated as producing significantly calmer feelings after
walking and watching than the city area did (p0.05, p0.01,
Tsunetsugu, Y et al. J Physiol Anthropol, 26: 135–142, 2007 137
Fig. 2 The scenery in the two experimental sites.
upper: Forest area lower: City area.

respectively). As in the case of a “comfortable” feeling,
watching in the forest area significantly enhanced the feeling
of calm (p0.05), whereas the activities in the city
environment lowered this feeling (p0.01 when walking,
p0.05 when watching). Figure 5 shows the scores for a
“refreshed” feeling as gauged by the Stress–Refresh test. The
score was significantly higher in the forest area than in the city
area before and after walking and before and after watching
(p0.05 before and after walking, and before watching,
p0.01 after watching). Significant differences between before
and after the activities were only observed for the city area,
i.e., the city area caused a significant decrease in feeling
refreshed (p0.05).
Figure 6 shows the mean value of systolic blood pressure in
each experimental site at each measurement time. Systolic
blood pressure was significantly lower in the forest area before
walking (p0.05) and before (p0.01) and after (p0.05)
watching than in the city area. Figure 7 shows diastolic blood
pressure in the same sequence as systolic blood pressure.
Diastolic blood pressures showed significantly lower values in
the forest area before walking (p0.05) and after watching
(p0.01). In a comparison between before and after, diastolic
blood pressure decreased following walking in the city area
(p0.05) and watching scenery in the forest area (p0.05).
Figure 8 shows the change in the pulse rate. There was an
overall tendency for the pulse rate to be lower in the forest area
138 Physiological Effects of Shinrin-yoku
Fig. 3 Subjective comfortable feeling measured by questionnaire at six
measurement times in the forest area and in the city area.
N9 at “Before walking” and “After walking”, N11 at the other
times. *: p0.05, **: p0.01 by Wilcoxon signed rank test.
Fig. 4 Subjective calm feeling measured by questionnaire at six
measurement times in the forest area and in the city area.
N9 at “Before walking” and “After walking”, N11 at the other
times. *: p0.05, **: p0.01 by Wilcoxon signed rank test.
Fig. 5 Subjective refreshed feeling measured by the Stress–Refresh
feeling test at six measurement times in the forest area and in the city
area.
N9 at “Before walking” and “After walking”, N11 at the other
times. *: p0.05, **: p0.01 by Wilcoxon signed rank test.
Fig. 6 Changes in systolic blood pressure determined at six
measurement times in the forest area and in the city area.
N9 at “Before walking” and “After walking”, N11 at the other
times. *: p0.05, **: p0.01 by paired t-test.
Fig. 7 Changes in diastolic blood pressure determined at six
measurement times in the forest area and in the city area.
N9 at “Before walking” and “After walking”, N11 at the other
times. *: p0.05, **: p0.01 by paired t-test.

than in the city area except in the morning, and a significant
difference between the two sites was observed before walking.
Though it did not reach a significant level, the p-value was less
than 0.06 after walking and in the evening. Pulse rate
significantly decreased as a result of watching scenery in the
city area (p0.01).
To assess the activity in the autonomic nervous system
separately from sympathetic nervous activity and
parasympathetic nervous activity, we investigated HRV by
means of frequency analysis of the R–R interval. Figure 9
shows the minute-by-minute change in the power of the HF
component of HRV over time. The data sequence is as follows:
morning (at the place of accommodation), before, during and
after walking, before, during and after watching, and evening
(at the place of accommodation). The HF power tended to be
higher in the forest area overall during walking. A significant
difference between the forest area and the city area was
observed at the 1st (p0.01), 9th (p0.05), and 15th
(p0.05) minute during watching. Though the HF power
tended to be higher in the forest area than in the city area
before and after walking and watching, it did not reach a
significant difference (p-value was less than 0.06 at the 1st
minute in the measurement before walking and at the 2nd
minute after watching). Figure 10 shows the variation in
LF/(LFHF) over time. The value in the forest area was
significantly lower at the 2nd (p0.05) and 11th (p0.05)
minute during walking and the 1st (p0.05) and 9th (p0.05)
minute during watching.
Tsunetsugu, Y et al. J Physiol Anthropol, 26: 135–142, 2007 139
Fig. 8 Changes in pulse determined at six measurement times in the
forest area and in the city area.
N9 at “Before walking” and “After walking”, N11 at the other
times. *: p0.05, **: p0.01 by paired t-test.
Fig. 9 Time-series change in the power of the HF component of HRV in the forest
area and in the city area.
N5–12, *: p0.05, **: p0.01 by paired t-test.
Fig. 10 Time-series change in LF/(LFHF) of HRV in the forest area and in the
city area.
N5–12, *: p0.05 by paired t-test.

Figure 11 shows the time course change in the salivary
cortisol concentration. As was already known, diurnal
variations where concentration is high in the morning and
tends to decrease as time progresses were observed in both
areas. Cortisol concentration was lower in the forest area than
in the city area at all measurement times, and there was a
significant difference between the two sites before and after
walking, and after watching (p0.05). The p-value was less
than 0.06 before watching. The present study found no
significant difference in the s-IgA concentration. No significant
diurnal variation was found in the s-IgA concentration.
Discussion
The results for the forest area and the city area are
summarized in Table 1. No indices showed significant
differences between the forest area and the city area for the
measurements taken in the morning and the evening. The
differences were mainly observed before walking and after
being seated and watching the scenery, followed by after
walking, then before watching. All of the indices except s-IgA
were generally in excellent agreement with each other.
The results for the subjective evaluations showed that
walking around or watching the scenery in the forest area
created a feeling of comfort and calm. Feeling refreshed was
higher in the forest area both when walking and watching, and
both before and after the activities, which can be interpreted as
indicating that the forest environment itself induced the
refreshed feeling regardless of the kind of activity and the
measurement time.
The findings for blood pressure and pulse rate demonstrated
that activities in the forest area caused a relaxed physiological
state compared to the city area. The significant differences in
all of the three parameters (systolic and diastolic blood
pressure, and pulse rate) before walking suggest that the two
environments had already had different impacts on physiology
before activities commenced. The temperature in the period
10:00–12:00 was lower in the forest area (about 22–24°C in
the forest and 26–27°C in the city), and the forest area was felt
as significantly more “comfortable” and “refreshing” before
walking. The whole environment in the forest area was
considered to induce lower blood pressure and pulse rate. This
might also be affected by the fact that the subjects had stayed
in the forest environment for 1.5–2.5 hours from 9:00, which
corresponded to the measurement time of “before walking”.
The reason for no significant differences after walking seemed
to be that blood pressure and pulse rate tended to decrease (a
significant decrease in diastolic blood pressure) after walking
in the city area whereas they were rather stable in the forest
area. Since pulse rate did not increase, the 15-minute walking
conducted in the present study was assumed to be light
exercise for these subjects. It has been reported that moderate
140 Physiological Effects of Shinrin-yoku
Fig. 11 Changes in salivary cortisol concentration at six measurement
times in the forest area and in the city area.
N9 at “Before walking” and “After walking”, N11 at the other
times. *: p0.05 by paired t-test.
Table 1 Summary of the comparison between the forest and city areas.
Physiological responses
Subjective feelings
Autonomic nervous system
Endocrine Immune
system system
Sys Dias Pulse
HF
LF/
BP BP Rate (LFHF)
Cortisol s-IgA Comfort Calm Refreshed
Morning
Pre-walk FC* FC* FC* FC* FC* FC* FC*
during
Post- walk walk FC* FC* FC* FC*
Pre-watch FC** FC* FC* FC*
during during
Post-watch FC* FC** watch watch FC* FC** FC* FC**
Evening
F: Forest area, C: City area, * indicates that significant differences were
observed in the index at the 5% significance level, ** indicates that
significant
differences were observed in the index at the 1% significance level.

exercise decreases blood pressure compared to the level before
exercise (Halliwill, 2001). The significant decrease in diastolic
blood pressure in the city area was hence considered to be the
effect of exercise. We assumed that diastolic blood pressure
was lowered already at the measurement time of “before
walking” in the forest area, so it did not decrease as a result of
walking. The significantly lower blood pressure after being
seated and watching the scenery in the forest area showed that
the activity had the effect of reducing stress. The fact that the
pulse rate of the subjects who returned from the forest in the
evening tended to be lower (p0.06) might indicate that the
effect of “Shinrin-yoku” lasted for a certain amount of time.
The results for HRV showed that parasympathetic nervous
activity tended to be dominant in the forest area, which implies
that “Shinrin-yoku” had a relaxing effect. A rapid decrease in
HF when doing submaximal exercise (Yamamoto et al., 1991)
or ergometer exercise until exhaustion (Tabusadani et al.,
2001) has been reported in previous studies, but the decrease
in HF during walking in the city area in the present study was
not considered to be caused only by the exercise, since the
quantity of physical activity during walking calculated from
the acceleration of the subject was at the same level in each
area, and pulse rate did not show an increase after walking (the
exercise load was not as high as in previous studies). Thus the
decrease in HF components in the city area was also
considered to relate to the perceived mental stress (Dishman et
al., 2000; Hjortskov et al., 2004). From this point of view, the
relatively high HF in the forest area indicated a connection
with the subjective “comfortable” and “calm” feelings.
Recently, it was reported that soothing music caused a higher
HF component than stimulating music did (Iwanaga et al.,
2005), and that an increase in HF power was observed during
Zen meditation (Murata et al., 2004). The outcomes in the
present study are supportive of the results from those previous
studies. The effect of the environment was more significant
during watching. As the subjects sat still in a chair in both
areas, the results during watching can be inferred to have a
close association with the mood state. Parasympathetic
nervous activity was more dominant than in the period of
walking in both areas, and moreover, it was significantly more
dominant in the forest area than in the city area. The standard
deviation of HF power was larger in the forest area, possibly
because walking around or watching scenery in the city area
caused a stressed, heightened state equally in all subjects,
whereas the relaxing and calming effect of “Shinrin-yoku” was
more variable and depended to a certain extent on the
individual. Rosenwinkel et al. (2001) pointed out that HRV
may be more applicable to assessing parasympathetic nervous
activity than for assessing sympathetic function. In the present
study, the difference between the forest and city areas was not
as clear in LF/(LFHF), but it can be supposed that
sympathetic nervous activity was more dominant in the city
area during walking and watching.
From the investigations of many previous studies
(Kirschbaum and Hellhammer, 1989; Ockenfels et al., 1995),
the result that cortisol concentration was significantly lower in
the forest area before and after walking, and after watching can
be interpreted as clearly demonstrating the relaxation effect of
“Shinrin-yoku”. O’Connor and Corrigan (1987) reported that a
significant increase in salivary cortisol was elicited by
submaximal exercise, while Jin (1989) found that moderate
exercise (practice of Tai Chi) decreased salivary cortisol levels.
The significant decrease after walking in the city area in the
present study might be attributable to the effect of the exercise.
The reason why there was no significant tendency toward an
increase or decrease in the IgA concentration in saliva in the
present study is unclear, and further consideration from the
viewpoint of individual variation, e.g., a connection with
personality (Ohira et al., 1999), or a relationship between kinds
of stress and the stress reaction mechanism (Fujiwara and
Yokoyama, 1990) is needed.
The responses in the parameter reflecting autonomic
nervous activity and cortisol concentration obviously
demonstrated that “Shinrin-yoku” in the forest was perceived
as a relaxing stimulation and caused an opposite response to
stress reaction through both the hypothalamus-pituitaryadrenal
cortex axis and the hypothalamus-sympathetic nervous
system-adrenal medulla axis. This idea is also supported by the
excellent agreement between the physiological responses and
the subjective ratings. It is considered that these results were
induced not by specific components in the forest, but by the
whole environment, including air, scenery, smell, sound, and
climatic conditions such as temperature.
In summary, in the forest area, 1) blood pressure and pulse
rate were significantly lower, and 2) the power of the HF
component tended to be higher and LF/(LFHF) tended to be
lower. Also, 3) salivary cortisol concentration was significantly
lower in the forest area. The physiological responses suggest
that sympathetic nervous activity was suppressed and
parasympathetic nervous activity was enhanced in the forest
area, and “Shinrin-yoku” was responsible for reducing the
stress. In the subjective evaluation, 4) “comfortable”, “calm”,
and “refreshed” feelings were significantly higher in the forest
area. The relaxing effect of “Shinrin-yoku” was also felt
subjectively. In conclusion, the present study has proved the
relaxing and stress-relieving effects of “Shinrin-yoku” by
means of a physiological investigation, with subjective
evaluations providing supporting evidence.
Acknowledgements This study was supported partly by
Research Project for Utilizing Advanced Technologies in
Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, 2004 (1603) from the
Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, Forest
Therapeutic Effects Research Association, Grants-in-Aid for
Scientific Research (No. 16107007) from the Ministry of
Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology.
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This article was presented at the 8th International Congress of
Physiological Anthropology, 2006 (ICPA 2006), in Kamakura,
Japan.
Received: September 30, 2006
Accepted: December 22, 2006
Correspondence to: Yuko Tsunetsugu, 1 Matsunosato,
Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305–8687, Japan
Phone: 83–29–829–8310
Fax: 83–29–874–3720
e-mail: yukot@...
142 Physiological Effects of Shinrin-yoku

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