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MTSU plays key role in 38th Elsie Quarterman Cedar Glade Wildlife Festival

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MTSU faculty and alumni and the university’s Center for Cedar Glade Studies play prominent roles in the operation of the 38th annual Elsie Quarterman Wildlife Festival Friday and Saturday, May 1-2, at Cedars of Lebanon State Park.

The event is free and open to the public. The park is located just off U.S. Highway 231, about 25 miles north of Murfreesboro and six miles south of Lebanon, Tennessee.

A number of years ago, event organizers renamed the Cedar Glade Wildlife Festival to honor longtime Vanderbilt professor Elsie Quarterman. The plant ecologist’s legacy includes 60 years of dedicated research of cedar glades and conservation. Quarterman died June 9, 2014, at the age of 103.

“The Center for Cedar Glade studies partners with Cedars of Lebanon State Park each year to co-host a Friday evening and entire Saturday of hikes and talks about cedar glade ecology,” said Kim Cleary Sadler, associate professor in the MTSU Department of Biology and co-director of the Center for Cedar Glade Studies.

“The program is led in part by MTSU faculty, alumni and students,” Sadler added. “Throughout the day Saturday at scheduled times, there is something for all ages to enjoy from plants to birds to rocks.”

In addition to Sadler, faculty members Jeff Walck, Tom Hemmerly and Kurt Blum have key roles with program events, as do alumni Roy and Melissa Turrentine, Danny Bryan, Billy Plant and Buddy Ingram, who is the Cedars of Lebanon State Park manager.

“The cedar glades in the springtime and early summer have a beautiful array of flowers worth seeing to appreciate and protect,” Sadler said.

Be sure to wear or bring hiking or comfortable shoes, as there will be ample opportunities for hikes, a scavenger hunt, “talk and walks” and even an “Owl Prowl” to close the family-friendly event Saturday night.

Hemmerly, MTSU biology faculty emeritus, will provide opening remarks during a time of reflections and remembrances of Quarterman at 7 p.m. Friday at the park. Quarterman served as Hemmerly’s dissertation adviser and he studied the rare Tennessee coneflower in her lab.

For more information about the event, contact Sadler at 615-904-8283 or email Kim.Sadler@mtsu.edu. People also can go to http://www.mtsu.edu/glade-center/ and obtain information on the festival.

For park information, call 615-444-4565 or 615-443-2769 between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Monday through Sunday or visit www.tnstateparks.com.

For more local event updates, follow us at www.mtsusidelines.com, on Facebook at MTSU Sidelines and on Twitter at @MTSUSidelines

To contact News Editor Sarah Taylor, email newseditor@mtsusidelines.com 

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