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Special
Programs in AFW
The following provide Clemson's AFW graduate students with unique
settings and facilities for study and research.
Extension Wildlife Program - This program is now under the
auspices of Extension
Forest Resources.
South Carolina Cooperative
Fish and Wildlife Research Unit
This group is supported by a cooperative agreement between the U.S.
Department of Interior, the SCDNR, Clemson University, and the Wildlife
Management Institute. It is one of more than 40 such units located
at land grant universities around the country. The mission of the
Unit is focussed on training and education of graduate students,
and the conduct of research of importance to the cooperators. Emphasis
areas include population dynamics of fish and wildlife game species,
wetland ecology, age and growth dynamics of fish species, statistical
ecology, and assessment of the impact of hydropower facility operation
on aquatic resources. Contact Drs. Craig
Allen orJeff Isely for
more information.
Savannah River Ecology Laboratory Master Permit Agreement
This permit allows AFW faculty and students to conduct ecological
research on the Upper Coastal Plain pine stands and hardwoods at
the Savannah River Plant. The Savannah River Ecology Lab provides
extensive lab facilities and financial support for students working
in the area. Contact Drs. John
Sweeney, Tim Fendley
or Michael Smith for more information.
South Carolina Aquaculture, Fisheries and Wildlife Cooperative
The AFW Cooperative is a research and educational unit supported
by Clemson University and SC DNR. Through the cooperative agreement,
research and public service projects are conducted that neither
SCDNR nor the AFW Department could undertake alone. In addition,
the cooperative provides research assistantships for AFW graduate
students. Contact Dr. John Sweeney
for more information.
Research
Facilities
Most AFW graduate students and faculty members are housed in Lehotsky
Hall. This includes more than 6 400 square feet of space with administrative
offices, 30 graduate student carrels, a teaching lab with prep room,
six research labs, Extension program storage facilities and a multimedia
lecture hall. Faculty members have personal computers and terminals
in their offices or labs which provides access to the University's
mainframe. Graduate students have access to these resources as well
as laser printers, copy machines, etc.
Aquaculture Research
Clemson's aquaculture research facilities consist of 42 0.02-hectare
culture ponds, several farm ponds, four ponds specially designed
for aeration studies, and a 220-square-meter building with an office,
shop area, fish-holding area, hatchery, wet laboratory and fish-
disease laboratory. An additional wet laboratory is available in the Poole Agricultural Center.
Shop facilities and a water quality laboratory are also available
in the agricultural engineering building.
Fisheries Research
Fisheries researchers have three modern research labs in Lehotsky
Hall. In addition, four large reservoirs are nearby: Hartwell Reservoir
(55,000 acres) is adjacent to campus; Keowee (18,100 acres), Jocassee
(7,600 acres) and Richard B. Russell (26,700 acres) are all within
a one-hour drive. The Chattooga River watershed is less than an
hour's drive west of campus.
SCDNR has made several of its facilities available to the fisheries
faculty and graduate students. These include the Dennis Wildlife
Center, Styx Hatchery, Wateree Research Station, Marine Resources
Research Institute, Waddell Mariculture Center and the seven Freshwater
Fisheries District Offices. In addition, the Dennis Wildlife Center
has a dormitory for graduate students and visiting faculty. Federal
facilities available for research include the Walhalla National
Trout Hatchery, Orangeburg Federal Fish Hatchery and National Marine
Fisheries Service Lab at Fort Johnson.
Wildlife Research
Off-campus wildlife research facilities are provided through cooperative
agreements with industry, hunt clubs, SCDNR, the Savannah River
Ecology Laboratory and Archbold Tropical Research. These include
the Delta Waterfowl and Wetlands Research Station, Dennis Wildlife
Center, South Carolina Agricultural Experiment Station, Webb Wildlife
Research Center, Belle Baruch forest Science Institute, Samworth
Game Management Area and Bear Island Game Management Area.
Other Campus Facilities
Campus facilities used by AFW faculty and students include the electron
microscope facility; computing
facilities, which consists of a network of on-campus computers,
including the University's mainframe with 128 megabytes of main
memory, a vector processor and 32 I/O channels running the MVS/XA
operating system; and the University's main library, which has more
than 1.5 million volumes and 7,200 serial titles. Graduate students
receive an account and an interactive mainframe USERID at no charge.
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