| December
8, 2003
Scripps Biodiversity Center Awarded
Grant
For New Interdisciplinary Marine Program
By Mario Aguilera
Scripps Institution
of Oceanography's Center for Marine Biodiversity and Conservation
(CMBC) has been awarded a multimillion dollar grant from the
National Science Foundation (NSF) to train a new generation
of scholars capable of confronting important societal issues
concerning the health of the world's oceans.
The five-year, $3.5-million
award was granted through the NSF's Integrative Graduate Education
and Research Traineeship (IGERT) program. The centerpiece of
CMBC's new program is interdisciplinary, team-based, problem-solving
training to foster analytical and communication skills with
a global outlook.
The
IGERT program was developed in 1997 to catalyze a cultural change
in graduate education by promoting innovative new models for
graduate education and training that transcend traditional disciplinary
boundaries.
CMBC's new program,
titled "Marine biodiversity: Understanding threats and
providing solutions," will involve interdisciplinary research
on ecology (present and historical), conservation biology, physical
sciences, genetics and genomics, informatics, economics, law,
and policy. The program will build links outside academia-nationally
and internationally-through internships and provide opportunities
for students to apply their training to real-world problems
under the mentoring of conservation practitioners whose organizations
are partners in the program.
"We expect the
result of these collaborative efforts will be creative solutions
that overcome traditional problems arising from the lack of
understanding between interest groups," said CMBC Director
Nancy Knowlton, the grant's principal investigator and a professor
at Scripps. "This is a truly inter-disciplinary approach,
in which Scripps students work alongside social science Ph.D.
students to learn how to have an impact on critical issues in
a complex world. Our goal is to train professionals who not
only can identify the problems, but also who can find practical
solutions within ecological, social, and economic constraints."
In addition to Knowlton,
coprincipal investigators of the grant include Enric Sala and
Jeremy Jackson of Scripps; Michael Tillman of the Southwest
Fisheries Science Center (SWFSC); and Richard Carson of UCSD's
Department of Economics.
The investigators note
that identifying the magnitude and causes of environmental change
is a complex task, but this alone is not enough. They say the
environmental and socioeconomic consequences of alternative
policy responses must be evaluated and information conveyed
to policy-makers and the public.
The new IGERT award
is one example of how CMBC is creating innovation in the study
of marine biodiversity and conservation.
"One of the
greatest scientific challenges facing society today is understanding,
protecting, managing, and restoring biodiversity in our oceans,"
said Knowlton.
Media Contacts: Mario Aguilera or Cindy Clark
(858) 534-3624
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