A living classroom: restoring wetlands.

Mount Holyoke professor teaches ecology through wetlands restoration on campus.

By Keely Savoie

Early in the summer, one easily could have walked by the small stream running into 麻豆传媒高清鈥檚 Upper Lake without ever noticing it. A wall of invasive vegetation obscured it, even though it lies mere feet from the path around the waterway.

The tributary and its surrounding land are the site of an ambitious ecological restoration project, known as Project Stream. Kate Ballantine, an assistant professor of environmental studies, launched the project this summer, after years of study and preparation.

Wetlands are essential for environmental and human health, according to Ballantine, reducing pollutants, replenishing water supplies, and providing habitat for countless species.

When the restoration of Project Stream is complete, all of the invasive vegetation will have been removed, and extensive plantings of native species will set a trajectory toward dominance by native vegetation. Water will meander slowly through the wetland, flowing over rocks and logs and interacting with wetland soil and vegetation, all of which will make it cleaner before it enters Upper Lake. There will be an accessible boardwalk, complete with interpretive signage, inviting visitors to experience the area for themselves. With multiple research projects continuing at the site, the area will be the very definition of an outdoor classroom for the local community and well as for professors and students at the College.

鈥淚t is incredibly exciting to arrive at this stage of the project, and I couldn鈥檛 be more proud of the accomplishments of everyone who has been a part of the restoration ecology program,鈥 said Ballantine. 鈥淒ozens of students have dedicated extraordinary time, thought, and heart to this project, from its conception to the final project designs. Future students will get to continue this work by contributing studies of their own as well as by researching how the site functions and changes over time.鈥

Ballantine sees the field of restoration ecology as more than repairing degraded sites, though.

鈥淥ur students want ways to pursue 鈥榩urposeful engagement in the world,鈥 but so much of what they learn about issues of environmental degradation and social injustice can leave them feeling discouraged,鈥 she said. 鈥淩estoration ecology is an optimistic and empowering field, asserting that problems can be addressed and that humans have the capability of making positive change. It shows that we can take care of where we live and what we love.鈥

Students are continuously and seamlessly engaged with the project, and able to transfer their ideas directly from field to classroom and back again.

鈥淚t鈥檚 pretty unique to have a field site that is literally a five-minute walk from our classroom,鈥 said Erin Pierce 鈥15, an environmental studies major who joined the project in its second year. 鈥淚t gives what we do an immediacy that you really can鈥檛 get from most college field stations that are located off campus.鈥

Perhaps the restoration ecology program鈥檚 greatest impact is the practical training it provides to students for their future work and research. From their first day in class, Ballantine鈥檚 students learn skills in observation and developing research questions. Later, they learn to design real-world projects with tangible consequences, to work collaboratively, and to communicate their findings.

鈥淣ot a lot of students come out of college with all these skills鈥攂ut our students have been doing it from day one,鈥 said Ballantine. 鈥淭hey have gone from being consumers of information to producers of knowledge.鈥

Ultimately, Ballantine hopes Project Stream will be the first of many ecological restoration projects at the College. She has worked with students to identify other potential sites to restore across campus.

鈥淕iven Mount Holyoke鈥檚 liberal arts mission and on-campus field station, we are a destination for students eager to learn this interdisciplinary, international, and growing field in need of thinkers,鈥 Ballantine said. 鈥淧articipating in this program empowers students to be able to care actively for the natural systems and human communities they love.鈥

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