From left: LC Creekside Director, Dr.
Dennis Campbell; INPS Vice President, Jim Struebing; INPS
President, Trish Quintenz; LC President David Gerlach, INPS
Grants Chairperson, Edie Sternberg; INPS Plant Sale
Coordinator, Mary Ring. |
Lincoln College’s Creekside receives Illinois Native Plant Society
Grant
Send a link to a friend
[March 17, 2016]
LINCOLN
- Lincoln college is honored to have received the Illinois Native
Plant Society Grant for its Community Pollinator Habitat Initiative
at its environmental education center, Creekside.
|
Representatives from the Illinois Native Plant Society (INPS)
presented Dr. David Gerlach, President of Lincoln College and Dr.
Dennis Campbell, Professor of Environmental Sciences and Director of
Creekside, a grant for $5,000 on Wednesday, March 16th, at Creekside.
The initiative is designed to provide guidance about how to
incorporate pollinator habitats in the broader local community.
Pollinators, such as butterflies, bees, etc. are key environmental
components in the propagation of many native plants and food plants.
Creekside will bring awareness to the decline in pollinator habitats
through demonstration plots of native prairie plants and outreach to
local schools and businesses.
Dr. Campbell says the financial and ideological support of the
Central Chapter of the Illinois Native Plant Society of Creekside
has permitted Lincoln College to extend its environmental influence.
[to top of second column] |
“The grant support for the Pollinator Habitat Initiative will benefit not only
Lincoln College students but also students of all ages when the seed products of
the wildflower prairie plot are made available to all local schools throughout
future years. This Pollinator Infinitive will also most definitely benefit an
important, ever-dwindling, component – insect pollinators -- of our local native
prairie ecosystems”, said Campbell.
Creekside is located along Sugar Creek, about four miles north of Lincoln, off
of County Rd 2000N, halfway between County Rd 1100E and 1225th Ave, at the end
of the Small-Edwards Trace gravel road.
[Christina Xamis, Lincoln College] |