STUDENT REGISTRATION - Winter Enrichment
Students can register for the 2022 Winter Enrichment lectures for FREE. The 2022 lectures will be virtual on Thursday mornings, February 3 through April 7, from 9 a.m. - 10:30 a.m.

Lectures will include automatic closed-captioning and automatic live transcripts. If you need an additional accommodation, please email Julia Whidden (jwhidden@wisc.edu) at least one week before the event date.

Lectures will be recorded. A link to view the recording will be available to registered participants only. Recordings will be available for one week after the talk.

By submitting this form, you agree to receive communications from the UW–Madison Arboretum. We value your privacy and will never sell your email or information about you. (Read the UW–Madison privacy policy: https://www.wisc.edu/privacy-notice/.)

Registration for individual lectures closes the Sunday before the event.

You will receive an automated email with this registration information.

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Please register below for any or all of the lectures by checking the appropriate box below.  
A few days before each lecture, you will receive an email with a calendar invite and a link to access the talk. Each talk will have a separate link. You will only receive links to lectures you registered for.

February 3- Culture and Conservation: Black Communities Advancing Environmental Justice and Stewardship. Dr. Na’Taki Osborne Jelks assistant professor, Environmental and Health Sciences, Spelman College, and cofounder, West Atlanta Watershed Alliance 

February 10- All the Little Things. Chris Helzer, Nebraska Director of Science, The Nature Conservancy. Helzer is dedicated to raising awareness about the value of prairies through photography, writing, and presentations.

February 17- Arboretum Research Symposium. Students, faculty, and other researchers will present findings from projects on Arboretum lands and in the Lake Wingra watershed.
February 24- Longenecker Horticultural Gardens: Connecting People, Plants, and Place. David Stevens, curator, Longenecker Horticultural Gardens, UW–Madison Arboretum
March 3- Understanding Movement and Population Dynamics of Migratory Birds. Amber Roth, assistant professor of Forest Wildlife Management, University of Maine
March 10- Four Hundred Years of Fire and Wind in the Boundary Waters. Lee Frelich, director, Center for Forest Ecology, University of Minnesota
March 17-Water Advocacy in Wisconsin: Watershed and Statewide Approaches. Allison Madison, sustainability and development coordinator, Wisconsin Salt Wise, and Alli Wenman, WATER Project outreach coordinator, UW–Madison Arboretum
March 24- The DRAWdown Design Project: Illustrating and Inspiring Climate Change Solutions. Andrew Hall, founder / creative director, Drawdown Design Project
March 31- How High-Resolution Satellite Imagery Has Changed Ecological Research in Antarctica. Michelle LaRue, associate professor, University of Canterbury
April 7- Anticipating the Hydrologic Consequences of Emerald Ash Borer Invasion in Tribal Forested Wetlands through a Sapflux Network. Angela Waupochick, PhD student, UW–Madison Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology
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