Strangers in Paradise:

Strangers in Paradise:

A Multi-Scale Study of the Spread of Alien Species into the Native Hawaiian Rainforests of Windward East Maui

Robyn Myers

Ph.D. Candidate, Graduate Group in Ecology,

University of California, Davis

Affiliate Scientist, NRCS Watershed Science Institute

Landscape Ecologist, WaterResources Planning,

USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service

Next slide Back to the first slide View Graphic Version

Notes:

INTRODUCTION:

Robyn and I have worked together for several years at the Information Center for the Environment at U.C. Davis.

I am the “GIS ….” at I.C.E., as the Information Center for the Environment is known. And Robyn is a PhD candidate in the Graduate Group in Ecology, as well as a Federal Research Scientist. [When she started her research she worked for the NASA Ames Research Center, and early this year transferred to the California State Office of the NRCS.]

I’ve worked with Robyn on her research from the beginning. Her plan from the start was to conduct a GIS based research study that was scientifically based, met the needs of the local resource managers, and could be delivered to them in a form they could use when the research was completed.

While I’ve not been involved in the planning or the field work, I’ve worked with Robyn along the way in developing a PC ARCView based research strategy. It’s been challenging because many of the things Robyn wanted to do are generally done in UNIX based ARC/INFO. But she wanted to be sure her end users could continue to use the database and results in a PC environment, so she persisted. ...