Submission by Ed Proffitt,
former Director, LERC
GRANTS OBTAINED:
U.S. Department of the Interior, Minerals Management Service grant ($60,000), 1993. To arrange and host a symposium on the remediation of the effects of oil spills on coastal ecosystems and to edit the proceedings. Symposium held in New Orleans in July of 1994.
U.S. Department of the Interior, Minerals Management Service ($120,000), 1994. To study the effects of oil on survival, health, reproduction, and genetic mutations of mangroves. Co-PIs R. Lowenfeld (MSU) and E. Klekowski (University of Massachusetts).
U.S. National Marine Fisheries Service ($20,000), 1995. To initiate an assessment of marine turtle strandings along the southwestern Louisiana coast. The focus is to be on correlation of strandings of turtles with activities such as Gulf of Mexico hypoxia, red tides, shrimping activity, and pollutant runoff.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency ($490,000), 1995. Proffitt was Project Manager and Principal Investigator of a two-year multi-disciplinary study of salt marsh restoration created from dredged ship channel sediments that contain low-moderate levels of metal and organic contaminants. In sites of varying ages, we studied plant colonization, growth, biomass, and succession and colonization by selected animal species (PI: Proffitt); population genetics of Spartina alterniflora (PIs: Proffitt, R. Lowenfeld); sediment metals (PI: J. Sneddon); sediment organic contaminants and physical characteristics (PI: J. Beck); vegetation and faunal accumulation of metals (PI: M.G. Heagler); and changes in site elevation (PI: C. Norman).
Florida and Louisiana Sea Grant (Part of total $188,994), 1996. To study oil spill contingency plans of states bordering the Gulf of Mexico with respect to appropriate remediation and restoration activities. Lead PI: C. Douligeris (University of Miami).
U.S. National Marine Fisheries Service ($15,000), 1996. To continue an assessment of marine turtle strandings along the southwestern Louisiana coast. The focus is to be on correlation of strandings of turtles with activities such as Gulf of Mexico hypoxia, red tides, shrimping activity, and pollutant runoff.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency ($500,000), 1996. Proffitt was Project Manager and Co-Principal Investigator with S. Travis and R. Lowenfeld on a grant to expand our on-going research into the mutagenic effects of pollutants on Louisiana marsh plant species.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency ($750,000), 1997. Proffitt was Project Manager on a grant that we have received in which the Louisiana Environmental Research Center will establish an institute devoted to management and statistical analyses of environmental data. The primary concepts are to set up a database in which published and gray literature data can be combined and where hypotheses tested using meta-statistics.
U.S. National Marine Fisheries Service ($11,000), 1997. To continue assessment of marine turtle strandings along the southwestern Louisiana coast. The focus is to be on correlation of strandings of turtles with activities such as Gulf of Mexico hypoxia, red tides, shrimping activity, and pollutant runoff.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency ($630,000), 1998. Proffitt was (before leaving McNeese State University) Project Manager and am still Co-Principal Investigator with Dr. Steve Travis on a grant to study among-genet interactions (i.e., competition, outcrossing) of the marsh grass Spartina alterniflora in restored sites. This project will involve a post-doctoral researcher and graduate students.
NATIONAL SYMPOSIA AND WORKSHOPS ORGANIZED:
1994 SYMPOSIUM - GULF OF MEXICO AND CARIBBEAN OIL SPILLS IN COASTAL ECOSYSTEMS: Assessing Effects, Natural Recovery, and Progress in Remediation Research. July 14-15, Hotel Inter-Continental, New Orleans, LA. E. Proffitt responsible for all aspects of organization (agenda, securing speakers, location, etc.), on-site hosting of the meeting, and editing and producing a Symposium Proceedings. Meeting size: 19 invited talks, 4 discussion sections, over 150 participants.
1995 WORKSHOP - MANGROVES AND OIL SPILLS. August 1995, McNeese State University campus, Lake Charles, LA. Invited participants worked to develop a "White Paper" on the subject for the U.S. Minerals Management Service. Paper to review state-of-knowledge on effects, remediation, and restoration; and, to make recommendations on best management practices for remediation and avenues for future research. "White Paper" Technical Report has been published by the U.S. Minerals Management Service (MMS OCS 97-0003).
1996 WORKSHOP - COASTAL MARSHES AND OIL SPILLS. June 1996, McNeese State University campus, Lake Charles, LA. Invited participants worked to develop a "White Paper" on the subject for the U.S. Minerals Management Service. Paper to review state-of-knowledge on effects, remediation, and restoration; and, to make recommendations on best management practices for remediation and avenues for future research. White Paper has been published by the U.S. Minerals Management Service.
1999 Workshop - RESTORATION AND CONSERVATION GENETICS. Held at the Estuarine Research Federation 1999 meeting (New Orleans) and co-organized with Dr. Steve Travis (McNeese State University), Dr. Susan Grace (NWRC), and Donna J. Devlin (University of Louisiana at Lafayette). Invited speakers will address the need for and methodologies of molecular techniques aimed at answering ecological genetics questions important to conservation and restoration ecology. Speakers will provide case studies for mangrove, salt marsh, sea grass, and fishery populations.
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