Conservation & Ecological RestorationCharlotte Reemts
2022 The Garden Club of America Fellowship in Ecological Restoration
Does Long-Term Pyrodiversity Increase Plant Diversity in a Tallgrass Prairie?
Reemts’s research will help land managers achieve restoration goals. Interested in understanding how fire shapes plant communities, Reemts’s current project will investigate how tallgrass prairie, which was created and maintained by fire before colonization, responds to varied fire regimes. With only two percent of Texas tallgrass prairie remaining, Reemts believes that prairie management is vital to protecting the plants and animals that rely on prairies.
The Garden Club of America Fellowship in Ecological Restoration
The Garden Club of America (the GCA) offers an annual Fellowship in Ecological Restoration. Established in 2000 with funds from the John B. Young Charitable Trust as well as GCA members and clubs, the fellowship’s goal is to support research that will advance knowledge and increase the number of scientists in the important field of ecological restoration, the active healing of the land. The $8,000 grant is awarded annually to exceptional graduate students to support specialized study in ecological restoration at an accredited U.S. university. Preference will be given to projects that include field research conducted in the United States. A panel of experts associated with the University of Wisconsin–Madison Arboretum reviews the applications and makes recommendations to the GCA Scholarship Committee.
For the purposes of this scholarship, The Garden Club of America agrees to the definition of ecological restoration as stated by the Society of Ecological Restoration (SER).