Science And Research


THE SCIENCE

At its core, Discover Life in America is a science and science education organization. However, no matter how solemn a duty this may appear to be, we are undergirded by the fascination and committment of discovering previously unknown lifeforms in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, and encouraging the same outside of its borders.

The information in the Science and Research Section of the web site is targeted to support the scientific side of the All Taxa Biodiversity Inventory. It is also meant to encourage you to catch our vision of the research neccessary for defining and documenting the Park's magnificent biodiversity. This knowledge can only be made available, understood, and managed through the active stewardship of you and I, its citizen-owners.

THE SCIENTISTS

To get the most out of the ATBI program, we must have a unique group of people called scientists.

A scientist, in general, by definition, is one who is a worker in a field of science (such as biology, geology, engineering, agriculture, meteorology, hydrology, chemistry, etc.). But, in a living natural resources type of program, specifically ... who are these science-oriented folks?

In the realm of the ATBI, a scientist is an expert in a specific field of biology called taxonomy or systematics. Through many years of study, the taxonomist has come to know intimately, a specific group of organisms: be it, to name just a few, tree root bacteria, land snails, flower flies, fungi, ferns, wildflowers, snakes, rodents ...

These men and women are the ones you call upon to identify newly-discovered life forms, and to verify the presence of many others. The Taxonomy Scientist may be found peering through a microscope, counting the number of sections that make up the antennae of an insect, or the number of lateral line scales on the side of a minnow: all leading to the identification of a specimen captured during an ATBI collection. These are also the experts that can inform the Park managers of a drop in the numbers of species (decrease in diversity), indicating possible habitat perturbation, a pollution problem, or a threat from invasive foriegn species.

Discover Life in America joins the Great Smoky Mountains National Park in saluting the work of these unsung purveyors of a fascinating knowledgebase, and expert assistants to Park Managers accountable for an amazingly complex inventory of living natural resources.

Donate Today

DLIA is funded entirely by donations and grants. Your support today will help keep discovery alive.


Upcoming DLIA/ATBI Events

International Day for Biological Diversity

May 22, 2013

Firefly Viewing

May 31, 2013

Tree Team Twin Creeks Arthropod Sorting

Repeats every month on the third Thursday until Thu Nov 21 2013 .
June 20, 2013
July 18, 2013
August 15, 2013

Find DLiA Online

Facebook Twitter YouTube

Living With Rarity

"...rare species have adapted to cope with life at low densities, in small areas, or in restricted habitats. Unfortunately, wild nature is no longer being left to its own devices, and many species face a tenuous future. Our own species, now shooting past 7 billion and far from rare, faces a different challenge: how to live sustainably without destroying the last strongholds of rarity. For rare species the struggle is to hang on for dear life until, one day, humans gain the wisdom and humility to share nature's kingdom."

From The Kingdom of Rarities (2013, p. 14, Island Press)
Dr. Eric Dinerstein, Chief Scientist with the World Wildlife Fund
Our 2013 ATBI Conference Keynote Speaker

 Don't miss the Smoky Mountains during your Gatlinburg visit.

We are a proud member of the Gatlinburg Chamber of Commerce