Virginia Tech College of Natural Resources and Environment

Viriginia Tech
College of Natural Resources and Environment
Motto Ut Prosim (That I may serve)
Established 1992
Type Public
Dean Paul M. Winistorfer
Location Blacksburg, Virginia
Website http://www.cnre.vt.edu/

The College of Natural Resources and Environment at Virginia Tech contains academic programs in forestry, fisheries, wildlife sciences, geography, and wood science. The college contains four departments as well as a graduate program in the National Capital Region and a leadership institute for undergraduates.

2010-2011 Inaugural Leadership Institute. Virginia Tech’s College of Natural Resources and Environment launched a new program to develop leadership abilities in some of its top students to help prepare them as future leaders in managing natural resources for sustainability and biodiversity. This inaugural class consisted of 12 students from various majors within the CNRE including, geography, forestry, wildlife science, environmental resource management, and natural resources conservation. After spending the entire fall semester learning about leadership attributes, the Leadership Institute traveled to Charlottesville, Richmond, and Washington D.C. to spend a week learning directly from top natural resources’ officials including the Virginia Department of Forestry, Virginia Secretary of Natural Resources and 1979 college alumnus Doug Domenech, Virginia Forest Products Association, Virginia Game and Inland Fisheries, Virginia Forestry Association, U.S. Forest Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, staffers for Virginia Sens. Jim Webb and Mark Warner on Capitol Hill, The Wildlife Society, American Fisheries Society, and The Chesapeake Bay Foundation, as well as the National Conservation Training Center in Shepherdstown, W.Va. [1][2] The Inaugural class included the following participants:
Dean Paul Winistorfer

Professor Steve McMullin

Walker Baldwin, a senior geography major from Huddleston, Va.

Adam Christie, a senior forestry major from Buchanan, Va.

Lydia Eggleston, a junior geography major from Danville, Va.

Kenneth Erwin, a senior wildlife science major from Powhatan, Va.

Kathy Hixson, a senior wildlife science major from Union Hall, Va.

Mitchell Kern, a senior wildlife science major from Charlottesville, Va.

Hannah Lee, a junior environmental resource management in forestry major from Williamsburg, Va.

Kelly Merkl, a junior natural resources conservation major from Chevy Chase, Md.

Brittany Schultz, a senior natural resources conservation major from Poquoson, Va.

Carine Lynn Squibb, a junior wildlife science major from Eggleston, Va.

Patrick Trail, a junior geography major from Richmond, Va.

Charles Turner, a senior wildlife science major from Bentonville, Va.

[3][4]

The College of Natural Resources and Environment conducts most of its research in facilities located in Blacksburg or through the National Science Foundation's Industry & University Cooperative Research Program (I/UCRC). In 2010-11, the college consisted of 737 students and 145 faculty members.[5] The current dean of the college, Paul M. Winistorfer, was appointed in 2009.

Contents

History

Although the college was not officially established until 1992, its roots were present in Virginia Tech’s history as early as 1925 when the first professor of forestry, Wilbur O’Byrne, was hired. By the early 1930s, students were able to study field horticulture, landscape design, and the chemical properties of sprays used to protect orchards. In 1938, the first bachelor of science degrees in conservation and forestry were offered in the Department of Biology.

By 1969, the Department of Forestry and Wildlife had become the fastest growing department on campus, having grown from 66 undergraduates and five graduate students, to 346 undergraduates and 52 graduate students. That same year, the department was officially made a unit of the College of Agriculture, and by 1974, it split into the Department of Forestry and Forest Products and the Department of Fisheries and Wildlife Sciences. By 1975, a School of Forestry and Wildlife Resources was established. This school became an official university college in 1992, named the College of Forestry and Wildlife Resources. In 2000, the college changed its name to the College of Natural Resources before settling on its current title in 2010.[6]

Academics

The College of Natural Resources and Environment contains four departments and executive and traditional master’s programs in the National Capital Region. As of 2010-11, the college had 737 students taking classes on the Blacksburg campus, thereby making it the smallest at Virginia Tech in terms of enrollment.

Fish and wildlife conservation

The Department of Fish and Wildlife Conservation offers a bachelor of science in fisheries science and a bachelor of science in wildlife science to undergraduate students. It also offers an M.S. and Ph.D. in both fisheries and wildlife sciences to graduate students.

Geography

Undergraduates can earn a B.A. in geography. The department offers two options for undergraduate geography majors: culture, regions, and international development or geospatial and environmental analysis. The department has been approved to add an undergraduate B.S. degree in meteorology in Spring 2012. This will be the only meteorology program offered in Virginia. Graduate students may earn an M.S. in geography. The Department of Geography also participates in the college’s doctoral program in geospatial and environmental analysis.

Wood science and forest products

Undergraduates can earn a bachelor’s degree in wood science and forest products. The department, which has a strong focus on biomaterials, offers students the opportunity to choose one of the following four options: packaging science, forest products business, residential wood structures, or wood materials science. Graduate students can earn an M.S., M.F., or Ph.D. though the department.

Forest resources and environmental conservation

Undergraduates can earn a B.S. in one of the following majors: forestry, environmental resource management, and natural resources conservation. Within a major, students can choose one of the following options: forest resource management, forest operations and business, urban forestry, environmental resource management, watershed management, conservation and recreation management, environmental education, and natural resource science education. Graduate students can earn an M.S., M.F., or Ph.D. through this department. The department actively participates in the college-wide doctoral program in geospatial and environmental analysis.

Natural resources graduate program (National Capital Region)

Located in the National Capital Region, the natural resources graduate program has three different areas on emphasis: urban issues, natural resource policy, and international perspectives. Through this program, students can earn a master of natural resources (M.N.R.), an executive master of natural resources (X.M.N.R.), or a certificate of graduate studies in natural resources. The executive master of natural resources focuses on leadership for sustainability. Currently, the natural resources graduate program offers over 30 courses in traditional and hybrid classroom settings.

College of Natural Resources and Environment leadership institute

In addition to these academic programs, the college has recently established the College of Natural Resources and Environment Leadership Institute for undergraduate students. In this two-semester study sequence, students study leadership styles and work on group projects focused on enhancing leadership qualities. Additionally, students meet with state government, state agencies, and non-governmental organizations in order to experience organizational and political processes in action.[7]

Research centers and cooperatives

On Virginia Tech’s main campus, faculty and students from the college conduct most of their research in Cheatham Hall and Latham Hall. These facilities can be used to study the physiology, nutrition, and genetics of trees, fish, and wildlife. Additionally, faculty and students have access to the Thomas M. Brooks Forest Products Center, located in the Corporate Research Center adjacent to the Blacksburg campus. The center contains laboratories for wood-based composites manufacture and testing, a high-bay wood engineering lab with full-scale timber testing equipment, a wood drying laboratory, the William A. Sardo Pallet Laboratory, and the Center for Unit Load Design laboratory. The Virginia Water Resources Research Center, established by the Commonwealth of Virginia in 1965 "for the purposes of developing, implementing and coordinating water and related land research programs," is also located in Blacksburg.[8]

Beyond Blacksburg, the College of Natural Resources and Environment is also affiliated with research centers that are part of the National Science Foundation's Industry/University Cooperative Research Center program [9], such as the Wood-Based Composites Center and the Center for Advanced Forestry Systems. In addition, the college has connections to the Virginia Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, whose cooperators include the United States Fish and Wildlife Service, the United States Geological Survey, the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries, and the Wildlife Management Institute.[10]

The college has also been the recipient of research funding from national organizations. For example, in 2011, the National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) awarded Virginia Tech’s Department of Forest Resources and Environmental Conversation $3.4 million of a coordinated agricultural grant to study the effects of climate change on southern pine forests.[11] Additionally, in 2010, researchers from Virginia Tech’s College of Natural Resources and Environment received a $3.4 million grant from the United States Department of the Interior to study the effects of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico on piping plovers, shorebirds that have been listed as threatened since 1986.[12]

Distinguished faculty

Harold Burkhart, a University Distinguished Professor of forestry, has served as an editor and associate editor of major forestry publications, including Forest Science, The Southern Journal of Applied Forestry, and the Canadian Journal of Forest Research; he has also authored his own forestry textbook, Forest Measurements.[13]

John Seiler, an Alumni Distinguished Professor of forestry, directs an internationally recognized research program in wood plant ecophysiology.[14]

In 2010, Audrey Zink-Sharp was the first female elected as a Fellow of the Society for Wood Science and Technology. [15]

Rankings

According to a 2006 study of the research impact of North American forestry programs published in the Journal of Forestry, the College of Natural Resources and Environment’s forestry program was second on the perceptions-based composite score and third on the citations-based and publications-based index.[16] In 2010, the National Research Council also ranked the forestry Ph.D. program as one of the best in the nation.[17] Additionally, during the last accreditation process in 1996, peer institutions ranked the college’s wildlife and fisheries programs first and second, respectively.

In addition to its academic programs, the college has also been ranked for its research programs. The National Science Foundation ranked the $91 million research program in the College of Natural Resources and Environment and the Virginia Tech College of Agriculture and Life Sciences fifth in the nation.[18]

Notable alumni

References

  1. ^ http://www.vtnews.vt.edu/articles/2011/01/012711-cnre-leadershipinstitutetrip.html
  2. ^ http://www.vtnews.vt.edu/articles/2010/09/092410-cnre-leadershipinstitute.html
  3. ^ http://www.vtnews.vt.edu/articles/2010/09/092410-cnre-leadershipinstitute.html
  4. ^ http://cnre.vt.edu/cnr_pdf/leadership-profile-booklet.pdf
  5. ^ http://www.vt.edu/about/factbook/student-overview.html
  6. ^ From Jamestown to Blacksburg: The Path to the College of Natural Resources by Ellen A. Brown
  7. ^ http://www.vtnews.vt.edu/articles/2011/01/012711-cnre-leadershipinstitutetrip.html
  8. ^ http://leg1.state.va.us/cgi-bin/legp504.exe?000+cod+23-135.7C8
  9. ^ http://www.nsf.gov/eng/iip/iucrc/
  10. ^ http://www.coopunits.org/Virginia/Cooperators/
  11. ^ http://southeastfarmpress.com/government/virginia-tech-shares-forestry-grant?page=1
  12. ^ http://www.lumcon.edu/information/news/default.asp?XMLFilename=201009131506.xml
  13. ^ http://www.vtnews.vt.edu/articles/2010/05/2010-358.html
  14. ^ http://www.nxtbook.com/nxtbooks/saf/forestrysource_201101/index.php?startid=14
  15. ^ http://www.woodworkingnetwork.com/news/woodworking-industry-news/virginia_tech_prof_is_first_woman_wood_science_fellow_127785923.html
  16. ^ http://www.redorbit.com/news/science/871194/study_gives_high_marks_to_forestry_department_virginia_tech_ranked/index.html
  17. ^ http://www.nap.edu/rdp/ http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/09/28/AR2010092805047.html
  18. ^ National Science Foundation ranks Virginia Tech No. 5 for agricultural sciences | Virginia Tech News | Virginia Tech
  19. ^ http://www.wm.edu/news/stories/2011/virginia-society-of-ornithologists-honors-byrd,-cristol-123.php
  20. ^ http://www.dof.virginia.gov/press/bio-garrison.shtml
  21. ^ http://www.naturalresources.virginia.gov/
  22. ^ http://www.cornell.edu/provost/leadership/bios/barbara-knuth.cfm
  23. ^ http://www.worldwildlife.org/who/experts/sybille-klenzendorf.html

External links