By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Thirteen Coast volunteers have educated and
prepared themselves under a new program to be specialists on
landscape and natural history. These
people are Master Naturalists, a new volunteer program
operated by the Mississippi State University Extension
Service and sponsored by Chevron, U.S.A., Pascagoula
Refinery. Dr. Mark LaSalle, Extension marine resources
specialist, coordinates the program from the Coastal
Research and Extension Center in Biloxi. "The
program was developed to fill a growing need for trained
individuals to assist with environmental education programs
and events in coastal Mississippi and to help expand these
efforts," LaSalle said. Among
many different projects, Master Naturalists make
presentations in schools, have helped with Extension
programs and Soil and Water Conservation Field Days. They
conduct nature trail tours at the National Parks and the
Sandhill Crane Refuge in Jackson County. "These
volunteers are of enormous value in developing and
maintaining area nature trails and environmental monitoring
programs," LaSalle said. "The Master Naturalists are
currently developing nature trails at a power plant and at a
Boy Scout camp." Volunteers
are trained in landscape information such as geology and
hydrology, habitats and organisms that live in the
landscapes. The 14-week course integrates this information
on a wide range of topics. "The
program addresses key environmental issues, as well as
connections and interactions of habitats and organisms on
regional and global scales," LaSalle said. "The underlying
theme of this training is that habitats exist and function
as integrated parts of the landscape around us." In
return for the training, the Master Naturalists are asked to
give 100 hours of voluntary service. Continuing education is
also required to keep the Naturalists up to date. "Many of
our Master Naturalists have already met and exceeded their
voluntary service requirement," LaSalle said. The
Master Naturalist Volunteer Program is a pilot effort
started in 1998. As the training curriculum is being
finalized, LaSalle said he hopes it will spread to other
states. Twelve states have already expressed interest in
establishing a Master Naturalist program in their area, he
said. Jeanne
LeBow of Ocean Springs has been with the Master Naturalist
program since it began. "I got
into the Master Naturalist group because I was interested in
learning the plant species in Southern Mississippi," LeBow
said. Part of
the purpose of the Master Naturalists was to provide a
battery of volunteers to help with existing parks and
programs. She has worked on several projects with the local
schools, as well as at special events at the Mississippi
Sandhill Crane National Wildlife Refuge in
Gautier. "When we
give tours at the crane refuge, it frees up the biologist to
check on the nesting birds that day," LeBow said. Anyone
interested in becoming a Master Naturalist should contact
the Coastal Research and Extension Center in Biloxi. Two
training programs are being scheduled for 2000, one in
Jackson and one on the Mississippi Gulf Coast. Released:
May 24, 1999
Forestry,
Wildlife & Fisheries News
Naturalist Group
Has Environmental Focus
-30-
Contact: Dr. Mark LaSalle, (228) 388-4710
Visit: DAFVM
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