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Global warming clouds our future. Pollution degrades our air, soil and water. Environmental toxins compromise the health of our children. Misuse threatens the sustainability of our forests, fisheries, wetlands and coasts, and the health of species that live there.

But there is reason for hope.

Through sound science and policy research, we're finding answers to these problems. Airborne lead and acid rain have been dramatically reduced. Industrial water pollution has decreased. Habitats are being preserved.

Faculty members from the Nicholas School of the Environment and Earth Sciences at Duke University are part of the effort to help find these answers and establish new environmental practices and policies to safeguard our natural resources for generations to come.

To contact our experts or learn more about what we're doing in states across the nation, click on the state you're interested in.

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Wisconsin
Forest Management & Ecology
The sustainable management of Alaska’s 129,000,000 acres of forest requires sound science and a careful balancing of complex and sometimes conflicting economic and ecological concerns. Forests cover about 27 percent of the state’s total land area. Two distinct forest ecosystems make up these forests: the spruce-birch-aspen boreal forest ecosystem of south-central and interior Alaska, and the spruce and hemlock temperate rainforest of southeast Alaska and Prince William Sound.

 

 

Contact Information

Norm Christensen is an expert on forest ecology and sustainable forest management.
 tel: (919) 613-8052  e: normc@duke.edu