Conference
Highlights:
Originally this
conference was to take place on a cruise ship to Alaska. But in the
winter of 1992, NMEA Board Members learned that that was not feasible.
Instead, it was decided to join a compatible organization at their 1994
conference. The American Institute of Biological Sciences, with the
help and hard work of Valerie Chase (MD) and Sharon Walker (MS), organized
the
conference which included the American Bryological and Lichenological
Society, the American Fern Society, the American Society of Plant Taxonomists,
the Association of Ecosystem Research Centers, the Botanical Society
of America, the Ecological Society of America, the International Society
for Ecological Modeling and NMEA. NMEA members were able to choose from
a wide array of sessions. Although an exact count of the number of NMEA
members in
attendance was impossible to determine due to the AIBS registration
process, estimates were from 150 to 200.
AIBS
Conference Program
NMEA
news announced conference details. (Click
on the image to enlarge it. )
Photographs
by Susan Leach Snyder
Because of the number of
organizations at the conference, some NMEA members did not feel as “at
home” as they had at past NMEA conferences, but for others it
was a great chance to meet, mix, and mingle with a new group of scientists.
It was certainly an opportunity for other organizations to see what
NMEA does and appreciate the importance of science education.
The NMEA auction, in particular,
attracted a crowd of newcomers, who wondered, “Who are these people?”,
and, “Do they always have this much fun???” Before the start
of the auction, Mr. and Mrs. Fish (Jeff and Deb Sandler) presented the
wildly successful world premiere of “The Adventures of A Pike.”
The Supremes made a guest appearance complete with mustaches! (Does
anyone have pictures????) One of the items raffled at the auction was
an all-expenses paid trip for two to the next year’s conference
in San Diego (donated by Sea World, San Diego). Fifty tickets at $20
each were sold. The lucky winner was Betty Edwards (MA). The
auction was the only source of funds for NMEA that came from the conference
and it was a record $5,800.
One of the conference highlights
was that Dru Clarke (KS) brought her STREAM TEAM from Manhattan High
School (Manhattan, Kansas) to present their experience with monitoring
a local stream’s water quality over a four year period. The data
had been previously sent to
the
EPA and a state agency (Kansas Department of Health and Environment),
which resulted in practical conservation changes in the watershed. This
was one of the first times students had conducted a presentation at
NMEA and was an early example of ‘service learning’ in water-related
issues.

Dru
Clarke's STREAM TEAM members look for macroinvertebrates in their seines.
As
a way of buying some of their collecting equipment, they sold T-shirts
with their own design: "We all Live Downstream.
Photographs
by Dru Clarke
The conference ended in Chattanooga
with a wonderful evening at the Chattanooga Aquarium, the largest freshwater
aquarium in the world. NMEA Awards were presented at the annual membership
meeting that evening.