|
|
About
Patrick O'Beirne's blog, Risk Management, Data Quality, Testing, Spreadsheet check and control
Patrick O'Beirne
Report any problems to
Subscribe
Subscribe to a syndicated feed of my weblog,
brought to you by the wonders of RSS.
Flavours
There's more than one way to view this weblog; try these flavours on
for size.
index
circa 1993
RSS
Links
PraxIS monthly
newsletter
Systems Modelling Ltd. home page
Spreadsheet error stories
Bernie Goldbach's best Practise blog
Megan O'Beirne, Contemporary Artist
raelity bytes - the
author of blosxom
__________
__________
|
|
|
Our eco-study holiday
In August Megan and I went on a course with
Archipelagos Aigaiou
about Mediterranean flora on the Greek island of
Ikaria and followed up by a few days holiday.
The course was a fascinating insight into the nature of the island and the science of botany and dendrology.
As well as conventional classroom lectures and laboratory examination of specimens that we collected, we went on guided field trips to the Rhanti forest and the Halaris River gorge. Our professor was the botanist Halil Cakan of Cukurova University in Turkey. (On a social note, this illustrates how young scientists can set up normal relations between Greece and Turkey, where there is a long and troubled past, even within living memory.)
Ikaria is an amazing island, unusually green for a Greek island, even in the dry month of August. There are still lakes and reservoirs, and an abundance of pipes strung across the landscape carrying water to the farms.
The Rhanti (Radi) forest is the largest forest of Quercus Ilex holm oak or hollyoak left in the Mediterranean, with some trees 500 years old.
Free-roaming goats eat young tree shoots, so the forest is not being renewed as much as it could be.
It appears that unlike the tethered and cared-for goats that we saw elsewhere on the island, these are simply owned to claim EU grants, and left to fend for themselves. Archipelagos have prepared a video on the consequences of goat breeding on natural environment of Radi forest
We also saw evidence of bark beetle infestation giving the "metro-map" tracks in the cambium (the growing layer of cells just under the bark) similar to those that we saw in the
Banff national park in Canada.
We also walked on one of the hiking trails in Ikaria and I hope to upload some of our photographs later. Because Ikaria has few beaches, it is not spoiled by drunk tourists, so it is mainly favoured by Greek holidaymakers escaping the heat of Athens.
We finished by visiting our friends in Athens who looked after us with true Greek hospitality. As well as the usual museums, we joined thousands of visitors going to see the full harvest moon rise over the Acropolis.
http://www.archipelago.gr/en/FieldCourses/MediterraneanDendrology/tabid/76/Default.aspx
Archipelagos, Institute of Marine & Environmental of the Aegean Sea, is a
Greek non-profit, non-governmental, environmental organization. It has been
active since 1998 in several parts of the Greek Seas (Ionian Sea, Sporades,
Central Aegean, Lybian Sea, Eastern Aegean). Since 2000, Archipelagos' field of
action has focused on the eastern Aegean, having its main research base on the
island of Ikaria but with activity covering the whole of the Aegean Sea.
Archipelagos action combines scientific research into the biodiversity of the
marine and terrestrial environment of the Aegean Sea and islands, with efficient
conservation work, in which the local communities have an active part.
[]
permanent link
|
|