Hi everyone!  This is an announcement for a Tropical Ethnobotany Field Course I 
am teaching this Summer in Bocas del Toro, Panama.  The course runs from July 
15 – August 9, 2012.  Please forward this information on to any other students 
who may be interested!  You can find additional details on the course website 
and the ITEC website.

COURSE WEBSITE: 
https://sites.google.com/site/tropicalethnobotany/<https://webmail.nybg.org/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=https://sites.google.com/site/tropicalethnobotany/>
ITEC WEBSITE: 
http://www.itec-edu.org/info.html<https://webmail.nybg.org/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://www.itec-edu.org/info.html>

COURSE DESCRIPTION: This 4 week course will emphasize Tropical Ethnobotany in 
the context of rainforest and island ecosystems.  The material covered is 
equivalent to an upper level university course in Ethnobotany.  Readings and 
lectures will focus on the plant use and traditional cultures of Panama and the 
surrounding regions of Central and South America and the Caribbean, as well as 
innovative methodologies and current theory in the discipline.  Much of the 
course will be spent learning field techniques and carrying out various class 
activities and exercises in the surrounding rainforest and local communities.  
The course will include demonstrations by local healers, artisans and other 
specialists who utilize plants.  Students will each complete a course research 
project, based on their individual interests, in local Ethnobotany and 
Ethnoecology.  The field work for these projects will be carried out with a 
small group of other students, with each student having their own focus.

COURSE LOCATION: Institute for Tropical Ecology and Conservation (ITEC), Bocas 
del Toro Biological Station, Boca del Drago, Isla Colon, Republic of Panama.  
The biological station is located on a beach facing the Caribbean Sea.  Coral 
reef and seagrass ecosystems lie out in front of the station and lowland 
tropical rainforests lie directly behind.  This juxtaposition of the two most 
biologically diverse ecosystems provides tremendous opportunities for education 
and research.  Panama's rich cultural diversity includes the Ngöbe and Teribe 
indigenous peoples of the Bocas del Toro region, the indigenous Kuna of the San 
Blas Islands, Afro-Caribbeans, Mestizos, and many other ethnic and cultural 
groups. See http://www.itec-edu.org/index.html for more details and photos of 
the biological station and Isla Colon.

INSTRUCTOR: Jillian De Gezelle, PhD Candidate and Lecturer, The New York 
Botanical Garden & The City University of New York.   Email: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

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