Registration now open!

Smithsonian Botanical Symposium
April 19-20, 2013
Washington, D.C.
http://botany.si.edu/sbs/

"Avoiding Extinction: Contemporary Approaches to Conservation Science"
Presented by the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History, Department 
of Botany
In collaboration with the United States Botanic Garden
Supported by the Cuatrecasas Family Foundation

Conservation science seeks to provide a rational framework for the protection 
of species and their habitats. At the inception of the discipline, scientists 
recognized that environmental problems, including land use change and pollution 
effects, were significant challenges to sustaining biodiversity. Scientists now 
acknowledge that, while these problems remain, other issues such as invasive 
species, interspecific hybridization, and climate change impose additional 
threats to species survival. Furthermore, paleoecologists have used the fossil 
record to contextualize the current loss of biodiversity based on knowledge of 
past extinctions and paleoclimates, and now models of predicted future climates 
are helping to anticipate new challenges.

Forty years ago, the U.S. Endangered Species Act was signed into law. This 
landmark piece of legislation was designed to protect plant and animal species 
from extinction based on our knowledge of conservation science at the time. The 
Act has led to many success stories, primarily due to the growing 
sophistication of the conservation science it spurred, but will not be 
sufficient on its own to address new conservation goals. With new landmark 
conservation legislation unlikely in the near future, how will scientists 
continue to move forward in their quest to preserve biodiversity?
 
The 11th Smithsonian Botanical Symposium, hosted by the Department of Botany 
and the United States Botanic Garden, will highlight past efforts and new 
threats to conservation goals, as well as new approaches underway that promise 
to safeguard biodiversity both here in the U.S. and around the world. The 
invited speakers will cover a wide range of endangered organisms, with a 
special focus on plants, to illustrate the challenges of modern-day 
conservation science in a rapidly changing world.

Symposium speakers
*       Scott P. Carroll, University of California-Davis
*       Andrea T. Kramer, Chicago Botanic Garden
*       Stuart Pimm, Duke University
*       Chris D. Thomas, University of York
*       Stephen Weller, University of California-Irvine
*       Dennis Whigham, Smithsonian Environmental Research Center
*       Scott Wing, National Museum of Natural History

Friday, April 19 
  6:00 p.m. - 8:30 p.m.    Opening Reception and Poster Session, The United 
States Botanic Garden
Saturday, April 20             
  9:00 a.m. -6:00 p.m.     Lectures and Discussion, Baird Auditorium, NMNH
  6:15 p.m. - 8:30 p.m.    Reception and Dinner, Museum Rotunda, NMNH

Information, registration, and poster abstract instructions at 
http://botany.si.edu/sbs/

Fax: 202-786-2563 - e-mail: [email protected]

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