Channel NewsAsia 17 Mar 15;
SINGAPORE: The Nanyang Technological University (NTU) has partnered with the Smithsonian Institution to become the first Asian scientific hub for the Smithsonian’s Forest Global Earth Observatories programme (ForestGEO), the local varsity said on Tuesday (Mar 17).
ForestGEO is a global network of more than 60 tropical and temperate forest plots in 24 countries where scientists examine forest function and diversity. The joint research and educational collaboration will focus on areas such as biodiversity, forest and marine ecology, climate change, human-environment interactions and genomics.
As part of the Smithsonian’s Global Earth Observatories programmes, ForestGEO also includes MarineGEO, the first long-term, worldwide research programme with seven sites to focus on understanding coastal marine life and maintaining resilient ecosystems worldwide.
The memorandum of understanding (MoU) was signed by NTU Provost Professor Freddy Boey and Smithsonian’s Interim Under Secretary for Science Dr W John Kress at the Smithsonian’s Castle in Washington, DC, United States on Tuesday. Singapore’s Ambassador to the US Ashok Kumar Mirpuri graced the event as the Guest-of-Honour.
“Together with the Smithsonian Institution, our combined research efforts will be instrumental in advancing forest and marine ecological science, to better understand nature and the world around us. The discovery of such knowledge will allow scientists to tackle the huge challenges we have today, such as climate change and environmental degradation,” said Dr Boey.
JOINT PROFESSORSHIP ANNOUNCED
Along with the research collaboration, a joint professorship between the two organisations will be arranged at NTU’s Asian School of the Environment. A world-class scientist well-versed in the area of tropical terrestrial ecology will be appointed to act as a conduit and coordinate research projects between NTU and the Smithsonian Institution.
“Both NTU and the Smithsonian Institution share the same vision that many of the answers to climate change issues can be found in the tropical Asia region,” said Professor Alexander Zehnder, member of the NTU Board of Trustees. He was instrumental in sealing the partnership between the university and the Smithsonian Institution.
Associate Professor Charles Martin Rubin, Chair of the Asian School of Environment, said: “We are looking to educate and train both top notch scientists and also students, to better understand the environment in the Asian tropical region which is not that well studied yet.”
Some of NTU's environmental science projects currently include the establishment of observation sites at the Sumatra subduction zone for seismic activity, the study of biofilms in urban waterways, the building of a comprehensive global oceanographic database and the sequencing of air microbiodome.
- CNA/eg
NTU partners US Smithsonian Institution to research tropical ecology
Today Online 17 Mar 15;
SINGAPORE — To advance research in tropical ecology, Nanyang Technological University (NTU) has partnered with the world’s largest museum and research complex in the United States, the Smithsonian Institution. They will collaborate on educational and research efforts in the areas of tropical forest, marine ecology and environmental change in Asia.
This collaboration is the Smithsonian Institution’s first formal research agreement in Asia. NTU will be established as the Asian scientific hub for the Smithsonian’s Forest Global Earth Observatories programme, a global network of more than 60 tropical and temperate forest plots in 24 countries where scientists examine forest function and diversity.
A Memorandum of Understanding was signed today (March 17) by NTU Provost Professor Freddy Boey and Smithsonian’s interim Under Secretary for Science Dr W John Kress in Washington, DC. Singapore’s Ambassador to the US Ashok Kumar Mirpuri was the Guest-of-Honour at the event.
Describing the partnership as a milestone for Singapore, Prof Boey said: “Together with the Smithsonian Institution, our combined research efforts will be instrumental in advancing forest and marine ecological science, to better understand nature and the world around us.
“The discovery of such knowledge will allow scientists to tackle the huge challenges we have today, such as climate change and environmental degradation.”
NTU’s new Asian School of the Environment will be the main partner to the Smithsonian Institution, supported by the university’s research centres - Earth Observatory of Singapore, the Singapore Centre on Environmental Life Sciences Engineering and NTU’s Complexity Institute. A joint professorship between the two organisations will also be set up, housed at the Asian School of the Environment.
Associate Professor Charles Martin Rubin, Chair of the Asian School of Environment, said: “We are looking to educate and train both top notch scientists and also students, to better understand the environment in the Asian tropical region which is not that well studied yet.
“We want to train researchers in the natural sciences to pay attention to the interaction between societies and the environment, and ways to promote adaptive governance of social-ecological systems.”
Professor John Stephen Lansing, co-director of NTU’s Complexity Institute and a professor in the Asian School of Environment highlighted the need to find solutions to problems like deforestation, which not only affects air quality in Singapore but “also leads to habitat loss for wild animals, triggering the spread of new infectious diseases from animals to humans”.
The Smithsonian’s Dr Kress said the partnership with NTU will open new avenues for Smithsonian scientists in Asia. He said: “Together, NTU and Smithsonian scientists will make discoveries that neither could accomplish alone.”
Read more!