Biology students create first-of-its-kind provincial biodiversity report
A group of 糖心视频 students have created a comprehensive of wildlife in Newfoundland and Labrador.
The report was launched at an event on campus on Thursday, April 4.
Modeled after the created by the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), the report details changing population trends and explanations for why these changes are occurring.
Comprehensive guide
While the WWF has created such reports at a national and global level, the students鈥 biodiversity report is the first of its kind for the province, providing residents with a comprehensive guide to the species that share the province with them.
鈥淲e hope this report will inspire people to get active in conservation,鈥 said Laura Richardson, a biology undergraduate student who was involved in the project. 鈥淥ur wildlife is in decline, not only in this province, but globally. We need Newfoundlanders and Labradorians to take pride and help restore it, because conservation groups can鈥檛 do it on their own. They need the public to get involved.鈥
Real-world project
Dr. Yolanda Wiersma teaches the conservation biology course, BIO 4651/7944: Conservation and Practice, the class that created the report.
She says for the past 10 years, the fourth-year undergraduate and master鈥檚 students who take the course are given a semester-long, real-world group project to complete together.
鈥淲hen I run this class, it鈥檚 more like facilitating a workshop, than actually teaching,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e meet every Thursday for three hours, which is a great format, and it鈥檚 a lot of flipcharts, markers and Post-It notes.
鈥淢y philosophy with the course is that it鈥檚 not about the end product, it鈥檚 about the process. Sometimes they come up with something that鈥檚 useful to the partner we鈥檝e chosen to work with, other times they don鈥檛. Either way, they learn a lot by doing it.鈥
Experiential learning
The students agree with Dr. Wiersma鈥檚 thinking and expressed their appreciation for her support and for the design of the course.
鈥淚鈥檇 like to thank the biology department for allowing courses like this to exist,鈥 said Tiffany Small, an undergraduate student. 鈥淓ven though it鈥檚 not a field course, I consider it to be oriented in that way because it鈥檚 so hands-on. It was cool to see the project manifesting itself throughout this whole journey, from an idea about an experiential learning course, rather than a lecture course, to a physical product that we made together.鈥
During the 12 weeks they were given to complete the project, the students reviewed similar types of reports which helped them decide the themes they wanted to include in their own.
Along the way they developed their skills in oral, written and visual communications, data analysis, graphic design and outreach, and demonstrated energy and commitment to the project.
Provincial context
鈥淭he outreach team created a feed and page, developed a news release, poster, brochure and website and organized the launch event,鈥 said Dr. Wiersma.
鈥淲hen I included these materials as part of the assignment, I didn鈥檛 know if any of it would be of a quality that we could do actually outreach with, but clearly it was because we have members of the public here, as well as partners from various community groups that saw some value in their work.鈥
Sigrid Kuehnemund, vice president of WWF-Canada鈥檚 Oceans Program, attended the launch and had praise for the 鈥渧aluable鈥 report.
She notes that wildlife in Canada is in steep decline and their own reports reveal that half of the monitored vertebrate species 鈥 451 out of the 900 鈥 have shown steep declines between 1970 and 2014.
鈥淵our report drills down a bit deeper into the provincial context and gives me the credibility to speak on a very local level,鈥 said Ms. Kuehnemund. 鈥淪o, it does have great meaning for me and for WWF-Canada.鈥