Campbell Webb, Senior Research Scientist, Arnold Arboretum
Thu June 23, 7:00pm–8:30pm
Location: Weld Hill Research and Administration Building
The giant island of Borneo in Indonesia is probably home to more than 5,000 types of trees, but botanists have yet to compile a complete list. Unfortunately, the forests of Borneo are rapidly shrinking, and hundreds of species in unexplored regions may disappear before they have been collected and recorded. Campbell Webb and his Indonesian colleagues have just finished a two-month botanical and ecological expedition to the heart of the Gunung Palung National Park in West Kalimantan (Indonesian Borneo). He will describe some of the remarkable trees he studied, share his efforts to exchange botanical knowledge with local collaborators, and explain the emerging global ‘semantic web’ of data that science is amassing on tropical forests. He will also share tales of living in the Bornean rain forest and his plans for four future expeditions in this fascinating and vital hotspot of botanical diversity.
Free, but registration requested
RSVP for The Trees and Forests of Indonesian Borneo to add comments!
Join Neighbors for Neighbors