Rainforests, Habitats, and Economies: A Story of
Restoration in Indonesia
Dr. Willie
Smits
June 16, 2008,
6:30-8:00
Hosted by Earth &
Life Studies at the National Academies
and Koshland Science Museum.
What if there was a way to restore rainforests,
create new animal habitat, improve regional climate conditions, invigorate local
economies, and produce alternative fuel all at the same time? Meet
Dr. Willie Smits,
forester, soil microbiologist, geneticist, and widely considered the world’s
leading protector of the orangutan and their habitat. Smits and his Indonesian
team have recreated lush rainforest from several thousand acres of parched
grassland, all in the span of just 6-7 years. The rainforest is created from
about 1300 species, including many crops vital to the local economy such as the
sugar palm, which is a high-yield biofuel crop. The forest is even big enough to
impact local climate conditions, with rainfall already up 25 percent. Soon the
healthy new rainforest will be ready for the release of orangutans from the
region that have been rescued after their habitats were destroyed.
Please join us to hear Dr. Smits talk about his
exciting work and his book, Thinkers of the Jungle. This event is free and open
to the public at the Koshland Science Museum, located at 6th and E Streets, NW,
Washington, DC. RSVP to Koshland Science Museum at ksm@nas.edu or call
202-334-1201.