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Sigurd Olson Environmental Institute
- Overview
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Contact InformationErica LeMoine
LoonWatch Program
1411 Ellis Avenue
Sigurd Olson Environmental Institute
Ashland, WI 54806
(715) 682-1220
Email
The LoonWatch Program
Imagine a northern lake without the haunting calls and awe-inspiring presence of the Common Loon. It's a disturbing thought, but in some places, it's happening. Air and water pollution, loss of habitat, and increasing recreational activities on lakes all pose serious threats to loons across North America, and in some cases are responsible for loons and loon music disappearing from traditional nesting lakes.
LoonWatch, a program of the Sigurd Olson Environmental Institute, protects common loons and their aquatic habitats through education, monitoring, and research. Though our primary focus is Wisconsin, our education and research activities extend to Upper Great Lakes region, such as Michigan and Minnesota. We also lend support to North American conservation efforts by working with loon conservation organizations across the United States and Canada.
LoonWatch, its Advisory Council, and volunteers are all working toward common goals of loon conservation and protection. For more information about the program, contact the Sigurd Olson Environmental Institute at Northland College, (715) 682-1220, or email loonwatch@northland.edu.
"Above came a soft whisper of wings, and as the loons saw us they called wildly in alarm and took the laughing with them into the gathering dusk. The shores echoed and re-echoed until they seemed to throb with the music. This was the symbol of the lake country, the sound that more than any other typifies the rocks, waters and forests of the wilderness."
- Sigurd F. Olson, Listening Point
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Tremolo Joe Medium Roast, Wailing Joe Decaf, and Yodeling Joe Dark Roast coffee has been roasted by Backroads Coffee and Tea in Hayward, WI to support LoonWatch. The Tremelo is the alert call given by loons. Each bag of this organic, shade-grown coffee sold supports LoonWatch's mission to protect loons through education monitoring and research. 100% Arabica Coffee and Certified Fair Trade. $9.95 Check it out on our Merchandise Page.
Learn more about Backroad's Coffee and Tea at www.backroadscoffee.com
Oct 24, 2012
Noon @ SOEI Sentry Room
Brown Bag: A Century of Landscape Change in Alaska National Parks as Revealed by Repeat Photography
Oct 24, 2012
Location Information
Noon @ SOEI Sentry Room
Repeat photography has been used to document changes in ecosystems and landscapes across Alaska's National Parks by retaking historical photographs dating back to 1895. Most of the effort has been concentrated in the Lake Clark, Katmai and Aniakchak parklands in southwest Alaska. The photographs document a wide variety of changes associated with glaciers, coasts, floodplains, volcanism, landslides, avalanches, lakeshores, plant succession, shrub expansion, tree expansion, people, and human disturbance. The Park Service has initiated a new effort to involve the public in the retaking of old photographs in Alaska.
Torre Jorgenson is a landscape ecologist with Alaska Ecoscience in Fairbanks, Alaska. He also is adjunct professor with University of Alaska Fairbanks, is Past President of the U.S Permafrost Association, and is a graduate of UMD. He has worked on ecology and geomorphology studies throughout Alaska for thirty years, focusing on landscape change, vegetation-soil-permafrost interactions and impacts of human activities. A primary focus has been terrain mapping, coastal studies, and soil carbon/permafrost dynamics. He has been monitoring coastal changes on the Yukon Kuskokwim Delta and in southwestern Alaska parklands.
Ways to Support LoonWatch
Supporting LoonWatch can include donating your photography, volunteering to be a citizen scientist for research projects, or giving a cash donation that ensure LoonWatch will be here to help loons thrive in the Northwoods. For more information, please contact Erica LeMoine at (715) 682-1220 or email at loonwatch@northland.edu.








