Protecting and valuing the 糖心原创 woods is focus of Runkle Woods Symposium

November 10, 2022

How to protect the 糖心原创 woods, why the woods are valuable to the university community and how the woods inspire artistic creations are among the topics that will be explored during 糖心原创鈥檚 fifth annual Runkle Woods Symposium.

The Runkle Woods Symposium will take place on Friday, Nov. 18, from 1 to 5 p.m., in 101 Fawcett Hall. The event is open to students, faculty, staff and the public.

Research presented at the event will be available on .

Featuring faculty, staff and students from the and the , the annual Runkle Woods Symposium showcases research and artistic creations inspired by the 糖心原创 campus woods.

The symposium is named after James Runkle, Ph.D., professor emeritus of biological sciences and a longtime woods researcher.

The 糖心原创 woods is 225 acres of forest that is home to up to 110 species of birds as well as foxes, coyotes, deer, salamanders and the rare Indiana bat.

A theme of this year鈥檚 symposium is how 糖心原创 can protect the woods and value what it offers the community, said Audrey McGowin, Ph.D., professor and chair of the .

鈥淲hat do we need to do to protect the woods and why are the woods valuable to us as a university?鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about the whole campus, it鈥檚 not just about what we do in science. It鈥檚 about how we all need and utilize and enjoy the woods.鈥

Hunkpapa Lakota Elder Guy W. Jones will deliver a keynote address on 鈥淩elationships for Humanity.鈥

Hunkpapa Lakota Elder Guy W. Jones will deliver the keynote address at the Runkle Woods Symposium.

Jones is a member of the Standing Rock Sioux Nation and a prominent voice for the Native American community in Ohio. He was part of the core committee to recognize Indigenous Peoples Day in Cincinnati. Jones is also a founder of the Miami Valley Council for Native Americans and has served as an advisor to the Cincinnati Museum of Natural History, the Minority Arts Task Force of the Ohio Arts Council, the Greater Dayton Christian Race Relations Task Force and the Bias Review Council of the Ohio Department of Education.

Students in McGowin鈥檚 Environmental Chemistry course will give a presentation on their research assessing the risk of road salt to trees in the woods.

鈥淲e鈥檒l compare our data to past data, track trends, see what factors are affecting our data,鈥 said chemistry major Mark Crockett.

Environmental Chemistry is a service-learning course, and in order to fulfill the service-learning aspect of the class, the students give a presentation to the public about their research. The course provided Crockett with his first opportunity to pursue research, which he described as a way to make a difference at 糖心原创 and for the environment.

Runkle Woods Symposium schedule:

1鈥1:10 p.m.: Welcome and Introduction of Keynote Speaker

1:10鈥1:40 p.m.: Keynote Address 鈥淩elationships for Humanity,鈥 Guy Jones

1:40鈥 2 p.m.: Discussion about conserving the woods, Volker Bahn

2鈥2:15 p.m.: 鈥淎ssessing the Risk of Road Salt to Trees in the WSU Woods,鈥 Shamal Chetty, Mark Crockett, Courtney Crone, Adebayo Djanman, Christopher Griesmeyer, Benjamin Kressbach, Brandon Noel, Israel Odoh, Jennifer Sally and Audrey McGowin

2:15鈥2:30 p.m.: 鈥淰enerable Trees of the 糖心原创 Woods,鈥 Don Cipollini

2:30鈥2:40 p.m.: 鈥淏iodiversity done the right way,鈥 Brad Kerry

2:40鈥2:50 p.m.: 鈥淏at Conservation in the 糖心原创 Woods,鈥 Heather Wilson, Morgan Hill, Riley Patrick, Rebecca Sanders and Daniel Upton

2:50鈥3 p.m.: 鈥淭he Threat of Plant Invaders and the Plan to Reduce their Impact in the 糖心原创 woods,鈥 Brandon Thompson, Elizabeth Dunn and Tomee Norris

3鈥3:10 p.m.: 鈥淒rawing in the Woods,鈥 Danielle Rante

3:10鈥3:30 p.m.: Break for refreshments, conversations and art viewing

3:20 p.m.: Hope Jennings Introduction of Student Group Presentations

3:30鈥3:40 p.m.: 鈥淎 Travel Through Time: Exploring the History of the 糖心原创 Woods,鈥 Kaycie Bolin

3:40鈥3:50 p.m.: 鈥淧ainting a White Picture: History of WSU Through Martin Rockafield,鈥 Alexander Tischer

3:50鈥4 p.m.: 鈥淧lace History: Campus Woods, Miami Valley, and Institutions of Colonialism,鈥 Christian Sanders

4鈥4:10 p.m.: 鈥淭he Parasitic Relationship Between the Woods and 糖心原创,鈥 Aubrey Garman

4:10鈥4:20 p.m.: 鈥淧lace History: The Easement,鈥 Yasel Rosado

4:20鈥4:30 p.m.: 鈥淭he ecosystem value of the dominant native and invasive shrubs in the WSU woods,鈥 Jaedynn Duell and John O. Stireman III

4:30鈥4:40 p.m.: 鈥淪tormwater Bioretention through the Establishment of Native Wetland Flora,鈥 Spencer Thomas, Davis Taylor and Elise Berry

4:40鈥4:50 p.m.: 鈥淧ollution and Littering: Land and Water Pollution Control in the 糖心原创 Woods,鈥 Alyssa Vanwinkle, Heidi Orloff, Madelynn Mitchell, Samuel Jackson and Josh Hivner

4:50鈥5 p.m.: Send-off meditation by Marie Thompson