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INTERPRETATION
Interpretive Activities
As discussed earlier, the Conservancy is including interpretive elements in
most of its programs. The Conservancy also contributes to many other
interpretive and educational activities, including the Trout Creek Service
Learning Project in South Lake Tahoe and the Biannual Watershed Sampling Day
sponsored by the United States Geological Survey.
The Conservancy also works with King's Beach Elementary School in a
special program to promote awareness of restoration projects and the need to
preserve restored areas. Students are also given classroom and field
demonstrations teaching plant identification, seed collection, and plant propagation.
Through these programs, students are informed of the Conservancy and its
programs, and encouraged to help preserve the environment.
The Tahoe-Baikal Exchange Program
Since 1991, the Conservancy, in cooperation with a number of other agencies
and organizations, has also assisted the Tahoe-Baikal Institute in a
University-level international environmental exchange program.
The Institute, a non-profit organization which also provides support for
other professional and scientific exchanges between California and Siberia,
each year brings together about 20 advanced students from North American,
Russia, and other areas of the world for ten weeks of exploring the natural
and human environments of two of the world's most unusual freshwater lakes --
Lake Tahoe and Lake Baikal in Siberia.
Lake Baikal
Lake Baikal, a World Heritage Site, is nearly 400 miles long and 80 miles
wide. It is the largest freshwater lake in the world (by volume), the deepest
(more than a mile in places) and the oldest. It holds more than 20% of the
world's unfrozen fresh water. Like Tahoe, it has extremely clear waters,
which are being threatened by human activities.
Lake Tahoe Program
At Tahoe, the TBI program's focus is on scientific approaches to
understanding the threat to water quality, and on planning and community-based
approaches to protecting the watershed.
Participants meet with environmental decision-makers and experts, attend
lectures and panel discussions, conduct field research, and participate in
two-week team projects sponsored by environmental agencies and organizations.
Through these and other activities, participants learn how environmental
policies are formed and implemented, and how political and administrative
bodies work in tandem with scientific researchers to develop means of
protecting the natural environment.
The students also have a chance to help directly in preserving the Tahoe
Basin through site restoration and other hands-on projects supervised by the
California Tahoe Conservancy and the California Conservation Corps.
Special emphasis is currently being placed on the work of non-governmental
organizations, which play an important a role in mobilizing attention and
support for research protection efforts.
A number of TBI students have had an opportunity to serve as interns with
organizations of this kind after they have finished the exchange program.
Baikal Program
At Lake Baikal, the students participate in a similar work and study
program, sponsored by regional governments and other institutions.
The TBI program not only provides a unique vehicle for students and others
to exchange ideas on how to preserve the water quality and natural resources
of these two lakes, but also an opportunity to develop greater international
understanding and cooperation.
The program is supported entirely from corporate and foundation grants,
individual donations, and student fees. Some in-kind services are provided
also by the Resources Agency of California and its California Tahoe
Conservancy, the California Conservation Corps, the University of California,
and other public and private entities.
At Lake Baikal, similar services and some funding are provided from Russian sources.
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