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Thursday Night Nature: Seeding Ecosystems of the Future with Evelyn M. Beaury, Ph.D. (May 15, 2025)

Start
Thursday, May 15
End
Thursday, May 15
Time
7:00 pm - 8:00 pm

$15.00

Climate change is impacting the distribution of biodiversity across time and space. Our gardens can be incredibly useful tools to support biodiversity conservation, such as by supporting native plant and wildlife populations and by reducing the spread of invasive species. In this talk, I will give a brief overview of how the climate is changing in the northeast and how it affects species distributions. I will then discuss how gardens can help seed ecosystems of the future.

Dr. Beaury, Assistant Curator in the Center for Conservation and Restoration Ecology at the New York Botanical Garden, focuses on the biogeography of global change, namely characterizing the spatial patterns and processes related to the spread of invasive species, climate change, and land-use change. She received her Ph.D. in invasive plant biogeography from UMass Amherst and completed a postdoc at Princeton University, where I explored spatial planning tools for nature-based solutions.

Program Fee: $15 (Members, enter your code at checkout to receive your 20% discount.)

All lectures will be held virtually using Zoom. They will be recorded and shared with everyone who registers for a short time.

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All lectures will be held virtually using Zoom. They will be recorded and shared with everyone who registers for a short time.

Program Fee: $15 (Members, enter your code at checkout to receive your 20% discount.)

Additional Information: Online registration for this program closes at 5:00 pm on the date of the program. Zoom invitations will be sent out after this time to the email used to register for the event. The link will come from lauricella@bhwp.org OR education@bhwp.org.

This lecture is part of our Thursday Night Nature series. The series features presentations by regionally renowned experts who address a wide range of topics related to natural history, biodiversity, ecological gardening, native plants and native wildlife.