Learn about the plants and trees of the Finger Lakes region!
Flowers of the HWS Campus
During "What's a Botanist To Do?" campers will see many different flowers on and around the Hobart and William Smith Colleges campus. From varieties planted by the HWS landscape crew to wildflowers growing on the trail to the Seneca Lake shore, campers will enjoy studying flowers after learning how to identify plants. All pictures taken by Christine Moskell
What's a Botanist to Do? Science in Action Summer Camp
Hosted by the Finger Lakes Institute of Hobart and William Smith Colleges in Geneva, New York, this summer science camp will explore the plants of the Finger Lakes Region.
The marshes of the Montezuma Wetlands Complex are a registered national landmark. Each year, more than 1 million waterfowl pass through the complex! The plants of Montezuma nourish waterfowl, shorebirds and songbirds. The wetlands ecosystem provides a resting and feeding area for these birds during their migration.
Since World War II, the Cornell Agriculture Experiment Station has been the center for research in New York on the production, protection, and utilization of fruit and vegetable crops, an industry that is today valued in excess of $2 billion.
Taughannock Falls State Park is characterized by its nearly vertical exposures of shale bedrock. This unique geology supports three state-threatened wildflowers: butterwort, birds-eye primrose and yellow-mountain saxifrage.
The Hobart and William Smith Colleges Campus is home to more than 1500 trees, some of which are older than the Colleges themselves. There is a red oak more than 200 years old, a 150 year old Austrian pine and many beech trees that are more than 100 years old.
No comments:
Post a Comment