Search The AudubonTERN Blog

Monday, April 11, 2016

May Bird Nerd Lecture - Saturday 5/7/16

Our next Bird Nerd Series is Saturday, May 7th 9am-11am at the Texas City Prairie Preserve and features Dr. Thomas Hardy from the Meadows Center for Water and the Environment as he covers The Function and Application of Drones in Natural Resource Management. He will be talking about drone technology in science related fields, as in what are functional resource monitoring unmanned autonomous vehicles (drones) and the application of drones for monitoring nesting birds - applications and caveats. This will be an extremely exciting workshop to learn about how cutting technology can play a vital role in the every growing challenges of coastal conservation!

Title: Function and Application of Drones in Natural Resource Management
PresenterDr. Thomas Hardy, Meadows Center for Water and the Environment
When: Saturday, May 7th, 2016
Time: 9 AM to 11:00 AM
Location: Texas City Prairie Preserve
2 hours of Advanced Training (for Master Naturalist)

CLICK HERE to register…

Dr. Thomas Hardy holds a Ph.D. in Civil and Environmental Engineering, M.S. and B.S. degrees in Biology and a B.S. in Secondary Education.  He is a tenured Full Professor in the Department of Biology at Texas State University and holds the Meadows Center for Water and the Environment (MCWE) Endowed Professorship for Environmental Flows and is the Chief Science Officer at MCWE.  Dr. Hardy was a tenured Full Professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Utah State University where he was the Director of the Institute for Natural Systems Engineering for 21 years and the Associate Director of the Utah Water Research Laboratory for 10 years.  He is a founding member and Past-President of the Ecohydraulics Section of the International Association for Hydro-Environment Engineering and Research and served on the National Academy of Science Committee on review of the Texas Instream Flow Program. Dr. Hardy’s career has spanned a wide array of fundamental and applied multidisciplinary research including the development, testing, validation, and application of assessment methodologies in aquatic systems. His research includes use of unmanned autonomous vehicles for remote sensing and image processing, aquatic ecosystems modeling, aquatic vegetation and macroinvertebrate dynamics, river and reservoir water quantity modeling and distributed watershed modeling. He is also active in the evaluation of fresh water inflows on bay and estuary health and recreation based impacts to fish, aquatic macrophytes and macroinvertebrate communities. He is an internationally recognized expert in instream flow assessments and has collaborated with national instream flow and river restoration programs in the United States, Canada, Mexico, United Kingdom, western European countries, South Korea, and Japan.

For more information please contact...

Kari HowardAudubon Texas
Coastal Conservation Program
1500 Marina Bay Drive, Suite 1800
Clear Lake Shores, TX 77565
Cell: 409-223-4777