Tuesday, June 21, 2016

Makerspace: Services: Hillsborough County Public Library Cooperative

Makerspace: Services: Hillsborough County Public Library Cooperative
Makerspace
What is the Makerspace?
The Makerspace is a community work space for building, tinkering, fabricating, and creating. Build a prototype. Work on small-scale electrical and mechanical projects. Create jewelry or program a circuit.

BYOM (bring your own materials) or attend a library event and learn something new.

Equipment

Makerspace Services

  • A Hillsborough County Public Library card in good standing is required to book any of The Hive’s makerspace services.
  • 3D Printing: Individuals may book up to four hours of 3D printing time per month. Please read the library’s 3D printing policy for more information. To book 3D printing time, contact The Hive at 273-3652 or via e-mail:TheHive@hillsboroughcounty.org
  • Arduinos, Raspberry Pi, LittleBits, and more: THE HIVE has various kits available for in-house use. Contact Hive staff to book hands-on time.
  • Shapeoko 2 CNC Milling Machine: To book time, contact The Hive at 813-273-3652 or via e-mail: TheHive@hillsboroughcounty.org

Monday, June 13, 2016

Studies on Community Gardening & Greening - American Community Garden Association

Studies on Community Gardening & Greening - American Community Garden Association

Interested in research on community gardens and greening?  Here is ACGA’s collection of links to studies and reports about how community garden programs benefit their communities, are being implemented, and affect their surroundings!
  • Community Development Through Gardening: State and Local Polices Transform Urban Open Space: By Jane E. Schukoske. (PDF Format)
  • Green Streets, Not Mean Streets: by Frances E. Kuo and William C. Sullivan. In an inner city neighborhood, the greener the residence the lower the crime rates. This is one of several studies on the relationships between people and plants in urban setting. Others include”Girls and Greenery”, “Kids and Concentration”, “Neighbors and nature”, “Plants and Poverty” and Vegetation and Violence”. All are available from this same link.
  • Involving Children In Children’s Gardens Farm In The City St. Paul, Minnesota: by ACGA Board member Anna Wasescha and Karla Ness
  • National Community Garden Survey 1996: by Suzanne Monroe-Santos

Have you found other useful web sites that you would like to see added to this list?  Send an email and the link to info@communitygarden.org.

what a great idea, we need to take 160,000 cars off the road every year




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Study Highlights Role of Tampa Bay Coastal Habitats
In Removing Carbon from Atmosphere

Study data and model will help Tampa Bay coastal managers
adapt to rising seas and identify priority restoration sites

TAMPA, FL - By 2100, seagrasses, marshes and mangroves in Tampa Bay are expected to remove 74 million metric tons of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere -- the equivalent of taking 160,000 cars off the road every year, according to a new study released this week.
 
Photo of seagrasses by James White
The study, led by Restore America's Estuaries in partnership with the Tampa Bay Estuary Program and other conservation groups, reinforces the importance of restoring coastal habitats in Tampa Bay and around the nation to buffer the effects of rising seas and a changing climate.The work was partially funded by that Tampa Bay Environmental Restoration Fund. 

Tampa Bay is one of the few places in the U.S. to have three critical coastal habitats - mangroves, salt marsh, and seagrasses. These habitats are very effective at removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and storing it in the soil for decades or even centuries, so much so that scientists have given this service its own name - - "blue carbon." 

The study highlights the substantial contribution that Tampa Bay coastal habitats provide for capturing and storing carbon, and provides new data to help local organizations and agencies understand what actions are needed most to help the bay mitigate the effects of sea-level rise.

As sea levels rise over the coming decades, the model predicts that much of the marsh and mangrove habitat in Tampa Bay will be vulnerable to drowning.  Areas along the shoreline that are drowned can provide new areas for underwater seagrasses to grow. Providing space for marsh and mangrove habitats to migrate inland, while maintaining adequate water quality to support seagrass habitats, will be critical to maintaining fisheries and quality of life in Tampa Bay.

"Over the past two decades, the Tampa Bay community has made great progress in improving the health of Tampa Bay's waters," said Holly Greening, Executive Director of the Tampa Bay Estuary Program. "We want to ensure that progress will not be lost as a result of sea-level rise. The data and model provided by this study will help us chart a course forward that protects the work our public and private sector partners have collectively accomplished over the past 45 years."

Thousands of acres of coastal habitat were lost due to development from the 1950s to early 1990s. Since that time, Tampa Bay managers have worked to restore the balance of critical estuary habitat types. As the remaining habitat is increasingly vulnerable to sea-level rise and continued development pressures, being able to predict changes in the landscape is extremely valuable to coastal managers.
mangrove shoreline
Photo of red mangroves by Donna Bollenbach

"This science-based assessment provides Tampa-specific data, recognizing the important role bay habitats have in mitigating the effects of climate change, underlining yet another reason to preserve and restore these habitats before they disappear due to development and sea-level rise," said Jeff Benoit, CEO and President of Restore America's Estuaries.

The Tampa-specific carbon sequestration data also presents an added opportunity to use market incentives to foster support for restoration efforts.
Projects that have a climate benefit, such as restoring salt marsh, can generate carbon offsets using the recently approved Verified Carbon Standard VM0033 Methodology for Tidal Wetland and Seagrass Restoration. Companies seeking to reduce their carbon footprint can purchase carbon offsets on the voluntary carbon market, thereby generating carbon finance that can support sustainable projects such as coastal restoration.

RAE will host a free webinar July 7, 2016, 2:00 - 3:00 pm EDT, to present findings from this study. Register for the webinar at:  https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/614016046120753923.

Find a copy of the report at https://www.estuaries.org/bluecarbon-resources.

This report was a collaborative effort of Restore America's Estuaries, Environmental Science Associates, Tampa Bay Estuary Program, Tampa Bay Watch, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, and the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. 




The mission of the Tampa Bay Estuary Program is to build partnerships to restore and protect Tampa Bay through implementation of a scientifically sound, community-based management plan. TBEP is a partnership of Hillsborough, Manatee, Pasco and Pinellas counties; the cities of Tampa, St. Petersburg and Clearwater; the Southwest Florida Water Management District; the the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the Florida Department of Environmental Protection. 


Tampa Bay Estuary Program, 263 13th Avenue South, St. Petersburg, FL 33701


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