Date & Time
Time: Friday, Apr 19th ; 12-1PM
Venue: WDR 2201
*Light refreshments will be provided
Abstract
Join us as we discuss one of the finest pieces in recent science writing. Elizabeth Kolbert’s The Sixth Extinction is a New York Times bestseller and Pulitzer Prize winning work addressing climate change and the environmental impact of humans. Her writing style makes the field of global catastrophe accessible to all and is both poignantly funny and painful. Her words of hope and hopelessness will be sure to stay with you.
Limited hard copies are available from Dr. Richer.
BIO
Dr. Richer’s work is at the intersection of environment and biology (particularly physiological ecology) with emphasis on the impacts of climate change and ameliorating the impacts of climate change. Uniquely, she has worked extensively with plants, animals and microbial communities, focusing on semi-arid to hyper-arid environments.
For more than a decade, she has been working to understand the physiology and ecology of complex biocrusts in deserts and the bioactive compounds they produce. She is particularly interested in how environmental factors influence compound production and isomer ratios. Her teaching interests include biology and environmental science.
She has edited a book on developing university courses for environment, development and sustainability studies (Central European University Press), and has published a guide to the flora of Qatar (Akkadia Press). She served as guest editor for a Journal of Arid Environments special issue, Toxins in Desert Environments, and has published numerous peer-reviewed papers. She is a full member of Sigma Xi and a certified senior ecologist of the Ecological Society of America.
Richer has a B.A. in biology (with honors) from the University of Chicago and a Ph.D. in biology from Harvard University. Before joining Duke Kunshan, she taught at Weill Cornell Medicine Qatar and the University of Wisconsin, Green Bay.