Student produces Arboretum guide for East Stroudsburg U.

| 17 May 2018 | 07:25

    A new Arboretum Guide provides a tour of 48 different species from among the countless trees comprising the 100-acre arboretum, the landscaped portion of the 258-acre East Stroudsburg University campus.
    The guide was presented last month for the spring opening of the Arboretum.
    The guide highlightsRobin Hill Pink Shadblow with fuzzy purple leaves, purple filaments and powder-blue anthers.
    Katsura, whose heart-shaped leaves smell like burnt sugar or cotton candy when they fall in autumn.
    Silky Stewartia, with woody egg-shaped fruits that open to reveal shiny brown seeds.
    Golden Rain Tree, with its papery, lantern-shaped fruits.
    Names to quicken the pulse of any tree lover. And they, along with the Ruby Horse Chestnut, the Star Magnolia, the Fastigiate Hornbeam and dozens of others, are all to be found on the campus of East Stroudsburg University.
    The Arboretum Guide is available in print at the admission desk of the Schisler Museum and McMunn Planetarium, located on the ground floor of the Warren E. & Sandra Hoeffner Science and Technology Center and in the biology department located on the ground floor of Moore Biology Hall.
    The guide is an initiative of the ESU Sustainability Commission and the ESU Environmental Club, spearheaded by club president and graduate student Weston Strubert of Bartonsville and funded by the Office of the Dean and the Student Activity Association.
    Strubert is frankly crazy about plants, especially trees, a passion arising from his study of forest structures and ecosystems.
    Working on a double master’s degree in biology/ecology and general science/GIS and remote sensing technology, Strubert felt sharing information about the beauty and diversity of ESU’s arboretum was important.
    “The best part is being able to inform others, to spread information to non-science majors and the community,” he said recently.
    The project involved 28 Environmental Club members, working with plant ecologist Emily Rollinson, Ph.D., assistant professor of biology, to catalog, identify, accurately classify and map the trees.
    The guide is divided into several campus areas, and each tree listed in the guide is also marked with a plaque giving both common and botanical names.
    There is a plan to eventually expand the guide, adding additional trees and including a large number of native species.
    “The arboretum is a great resource for the campus and the local community, helping us recognize the natural diversity around us,” said Dr. Rollinson recently.
    She stresses that the guide is a student-driven project and “a labor of love” for Strubert, noting that it speaks not only to the students’ stake in biology and ecology but to their commitment to the university.
    Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences Peter Hawkes, Ph.D., is proud of the students’ work.
    “We have a powerful environmental studies program that benefits from our location in the Pocono Mountains, with its streams and glacial lakes, and opportunities for field studies, and that holds true for the campus, with its multitude of different species of trees. There is so much to see.”
    As for Weston Strubert, he urges both campus and local communities to take some time to stroll the Arboretum and relish the beauty of all those fascinating trees.