• Protecting Water and Farmland in Simcoe County

Tuesday February 10: Marine ecologist on climate change in Midland

By
In Environment
Feb 8th, 2015
0 Comments
1209 Views
Who: Dr. Peter Sale – noted marine scientist and author of “Our Dying Planet” will be interviewed by Fred Hacker
When: Tuesday Feb. 10 at 7:30 PM
Where: at the Midland Cultural Centre, 333 King St.Midland. Phone: (705) 527 4420  (Doors open at 7:00)
Tickets – Adults $19.00  Students $10.00.

United Nations University

Professor Peter Sale is a marine ecologist with over 40 years experience in tropical coastal ecosystems, particularly coral reefs. Prior to joining the UNU Institute for Water, Environment and Health (UNU-INWEH), he was a faculty member at the University of Sydney, Australia (1968-1987), University of New Hampshire, USA (1988-1993) and University of Windsor, Canada (1994-2006). His work has focused primarily on reef fish ecology, most recently on aspects of juvenile ecology, recruitment and connectivity. He has done research in Hawaii, Australia, the Caribbean and the Middle East, and visited reefs in many places in between. He has successfully used his fundamental science research to develop and guide projects in international development and sustainable coastal marine management in the Caribbean and the Indo-Pacific. His laboratory has produced over 200 technical publications and he has edited three books dealing with marine ecology. Dr. Sale currently leads the Connectivity programme within the Coral Reef Targeted Research Project as well as Coastal Zone Management in the Arabian Gulf. He is also Professor Emeritus, University of Windsor.

Great chance to hear from marine expert

Letter to Midland Mirror February 4 2015

MIDLAND – Midland is fortunate to have the opportunity to see Dr. Peter Sale interviewed at the Midland Cultural Centre on Feb. 10 at 7:30 p.m.

Dr. Sale is one of the world’s leading experts on coral ecology and understands the harm we are doing to these rich systems, which are home to 25 per cent of all marine species.

Some of the consequences of human activities include reef sedimentation, rising ocean temperatures, rapidly increasing acidity and direct physical damage caused by irresponsible fishing practices. Many of these effects are caused, directly or indirectly, by climate change.

This is a unique opportunity. Come learn about the full extent of the problem and what positive steps could be taken to reverse the current downward trend.

Thanks to Fred Hacker, who will be interviewing Dr. Sale, and to the many volunteers who keep the Midland Cultural Centre functioning so well.

Peter Stubbins, Tiny Township

Leave a Reply

Commenters must post under real names. AWARE Simcoe reserves the right to edit or not publish comments. Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *