Research
task groups, formed to study particular aspects of Great Lakes ecology, for example the source and fate of toxic contaminants, the physical and biological dynamics of large lake environments, and the social and political factors of environmental degradation.
Seminar
series, from 15 to 35 annually, covering a wide range of topics in chemistry and the biological and social sciences. Each member and affiliate campus is offered a seminar in each of the two semesters. Some of this year’s presentations dealt with invasive species, fish mortality, global warming, river ice processes, the toxic effect of pharmaceuticals, and the transport of contaminants by air, bird, fish or other sea life. We estimate that since 1986 over 6,000 students, faculty and the general public have attended one of these seminars.
Research
planning workshops bring potential collaborators together to develop research agendas and plan for future collaborative work. Over the years, the GLRC has sponsored nearly thirty of these workshops. The most recent was the Great Lakes Restoration Workshop (co-sponsored by the Center for Environmental Information, New York Sea Grant, and Congressman James Walsh), held March 18, 2005 at SUNY ESF, in order to discover what research was needed to support New York’s participation in Great Lakes Restoration efforts. The research priority categories were aligned with those prepared for the Great Lakes Regional Collaborative and the report was made available to New York Great Lakes leaders and government officials.
GLRC Small Grants and the New York Great Lakes Protection Fund Small Grants (NYGLPF). Some of these programs funds are intended to be used as seed money for multi-campus innovative research. The grants projects awarded under this program have gone on to attract over $10 million dollars in additional support for Consortium scientists..