University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science

Overview

Beginning with Reginald Truitt’s dockside laboratory in 1925, the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science has traveled the road to discovery. For more than 80 years, UMCES students, researchers and faculty have gathered information and developed theories that have helped improve society’s scientific understanding of the environment. By sharing this newfound knowledge on important issues such as fisheries management, ecosystem health and climate change, the Center has had an undeniable impact on the way we think about the natural world.

As Maryland’s premier research institution aimed at advancing scientific knowledge of the environment, the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science is one of twelve institutions within the University System of Maryland.

The Center has a unique statutory mandate to conduct a comprehensive scientific program to develop and apply predictive ecology for the improvement and preservation of Maryland’s physical environment. In carrying out this mission, the Center also has a distinct responsibility to prepare future scientists and environmental stewards to meet the growing environmental challenges facing society today and research needs of tomorrow.

Comprised of the Appalachian Laboratory in the mountains of western Maryland, the Chesapeake Biological Laboratory at the mouth of the Patuxent River, the Horn Point Laboratory on the Eastern Shore, the Institute of Marine and Environmental Technology in Baltimore, and the Maryland Sea Grant College located in College Park, the Center excels in bringing together interdisciplinary scientific studies in its pursuit of a greater understanding about ecosystems and their natural processes. Each laboratory is strategically focused on specific areas of research, education and scientific application, making the Center among the only institutions in the world to examine a large ecosystem – the Chesapeake Bay and its watershed – in its entirety.

Though the Center is a non-degree granting institution, it is extensively involved in education on many levels as it strives for excellence in environmental science programs. Providing professional research opportunities under the direct supervision of leading environmental scientists, the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science supports more than one hundred exemplary graduate students annually through four collaborative graduate programs – Marine Estuarine Environmental Sciences, Environmental Toxicology, Applied Ecology and Conservation Biology; and Wildlife and Fisheries Management. A leader in providing the research necessary for sound environmental management and efficient solutions to natural resource challenges, the Center’s faculty and graduates are sought out around the world for their proficient research and conscientious advice.

Adaptation Work:

To meet the growing challenges climate change is having on Maryland, the region and the world, UMCES research programs seek to broaden our understanding of climate change’s effects on coastal ecosystems, specifically their sensitivity and adaptability to those changes.

While it’s widely understood that climate change effects temperature, rainfall, and sea level rise, UMCES is looking for answers to question critical to the region’s future. How will increased climate variability and its increase of “wet years” and “dry years” impact Chesapeake Bay restoration? How will climatic cycles like the El Niño Southern Oscillation or the North Atlantic Oscillation impact coastal ecosystems across the country? And, how can the State of Maryland adapt to these change?

By collaborating with colleagues and providing institutional support to policymakers, UMCES scientists and graduate students are rising to the challenge of understanding the regional effects of climate change and charting a path to a more sustainable future.

Related research:

UMCES-supported Climate Change Reports:

In addition to their research, UMCES scientists have produced several reports related to the consequences of climate change on marine and terrestrial systems, including the following representatives:

Phone Number: 410-228-9250

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