EARTH DAY: Three P.E.I. environmental experts share their passions and concerns for the planet

STORY CONTINUES BELOW THESE SALTWIRE VIDEOS
CHARLOTTETOWN, P.E.I. — To mark Earth Day 2023 on April 22, Rafe Wright, Saltwire’s Native Journalism Initiative local weather change reporter, spoke with enviromental consultants Adam Fenech, Rosemary Curley and Kate MacQuarrie about their motivation to guard the Earth, their considerations about the way forward for P.E.I. and what they hope can be their legacies.
Adam Fenech
• Expertise: Fenech moved to P.E.I. in 2012 as an affiliate professor on the Faculty of Local weather Change and Adaptation and director at UPEI Local weather Lab. Previously, he was a professor on the College of Toronto and the Smithsonian Establishment.
• Motivation: As a baby, Fenech’s mom would typically take him and his brothers to the native park in Toronto, the place he would acquire tadpoles and bugs to watch their progress.
• Main considerations: Rising sea ranges and erosion are essentially the most urgent points in P.E.I. Fenech stated the speed at which erosion is happening may be very alarming. This yr, his largest concern is forest fires, because of the bushes nonetheless down after post-tropical storm Fiona.
• Legacy: Fenech attended the 1988 convention on altering environment, the place he was an early advocate for local weather motion. Since 2012, he has launched Coastal Impacts Visualization Setting, a digital expertise which permits customers to fly over the province, elevating and reducing sea ranges to study results of rising sea ranges.
Rosemary Curley

• Expertise: Curley has been a member of Nature P.E.I. since 1969. A retired wildlife biologist, she spent greater than three a long time with the P.E.I. Fish and Wildlife Division and was president of Nature P.E.I. till 2023.
• Motivation: Curley’ ardour for nature goes again to her teenage years. She stated she believes there’s a non secular side to nature, as it’s the place she feels most at peace.
• Main considerations: As a result of altering temperatures, Curley has noticed dozens of hen species depart P.E.I. and a number of other new species arrive. She believes that is regarding, as birds have an effect on many features of life, like protecting down insect populations.
• Legacy: In 2016, Curley led Nature P.E.I. by way of a five-year challenge to replace the Maritime Breeding Chook Atlas, a challenge requiring dozens of volunteers and a whole bunch of hours of analysis. She additionally assisted in a challenge in 2015 that noticed P.E.I.’s recorded spider species up to date from round 40 to nicely over 200 species.
Kate MacQuarrie
• Expertise: An award-winning biologist and naturalist with over 30 years of expertise with environmental points, MacQuarrie can also be the previous govt director of the Island Nature Belief.
• Motivation: MacQuarrie has liked nature her whole life. She can also be a forager and a hunter and spends most of her time in the summertime outdoor amassing, observing and recording several types of flowers.
• Main considerations: City sprawl and huge improvement initiatives in pure areas throughout P.E.I. are areas that MacQuarrie stated wants extra consideration, because the lack of pure habitat for wildlife has the potential to negatively have an effect on many features of Prince Edward Island’s ecosystem.
• Legacy: In 2020, MacQuarrie launched P.E.I. Untamed, an internet weblog sequence devoted to all issues nature-related in P.E.I. The data is sourced by MacQuarrie and is fact-checked by colleagues and local weather consultants. Since its launch, the web site has turn out to be a dependable and informative supply for a whole bunch throughout the province.