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Students and staff in the Department of Natural Resources have access to a wide range of facilities, for both teaching and research. The following lists some of the more notable ones directly affiliated with DNR. In addition, students and staff in the Department also have access to the world-class facilities of Cornell as a whole.

Fernow Hall

Fernow Hall is home to the Department of Natural Resources (DNR). The building was constructed between 1911 - 1914 as a center for teaching, research, and extension activities for the former College of Forestry. Fernow Hall was named for Bernhard Fernow, first Dean of the College of Forestry.

Today, Fernow Hall provides space for offices, classrooms, and laboratories for many of DNR's faculty, staff, and students.

 

Cornell Biological
Field Station
The Cornell Biological Field Station (CBFS) is a 430-acre property located on the south shore of Oneida Lake, New York. The CBFS serves as a primary field site for aquatic research at Cornell University. The principal mission of the Field Station is to provide facilities for long-term ecological research and to support the University's educational programs, with special emphasis on freshwater systems. The centerpiece of the research program is a 40-year long-term database on the food web of Oneida Lake, New York. This program is internationally recognized for its contribution to the understanding of aquatic food webs. The research has involved scientists with a diverse range of specializations including fish ecology and management, limnology, ecological modeling, population dynamics, wildlife ecology, geochemistry, fish diseases, human dimensions of fisheries management, exotic species, and aquatic birds. The Field Station also plays a key role in providing educational experiences for graduate students with its on-site research faculty advising and serving on graduate student committees, and for undergraduate students by providing a field site for several courses and a summer undergraduate internship program. The Field Station is currently a regional center for lake related research with studies involving water bodies ranging in scale from small lakes and ponds to Oneida Lake to the Finger Lakes of central New York State to the Great Lakes.
 

Arnot Forest
The Arnot Teaching and Research Forest is a 4,075-acre forest located 20 miles southwest of the Cornell campus. It was acquired by Cornell in 1927 in order to serve as the primary field location for faculty and student training and research related to professional forestry. A camp with cabins, sanitary building, and a lodge with an institutional kitchen was added in the 1950's and 60's. A facility for maple syrup research, teaching, and production was built in the mid-1950's and an office/library were added in the 1980's. The Arnot is currently directed by Peter Smallidge. The current station manager is Don Schaufler, a professional forester responsible for management of Arnot Forest and other college forestlands. The Arnot is used by DNR faculty and staff for research, teaching, and extension/outreach. These functions are integrated into timber and maple syrup production areas whenever feasible along with environmental and aesthetic considerations. The income generated from these activities is used toward operating costs of the facility. Cornell community research is encouraged as are day use activities such as hiking, bicycling, birdwatching, and picnicking.
 

REM facility
The Resource Ecology and Management (REM) facility is operated by the Department of Natural Resources at Cornell University. The facility is a field research facility that provides lab space for various projects. The facility has several buildings in which research experiments are conducted. Aquaculture, fish behavior and management, and biological control of exotic plant species are just a few major projects that are housed at the facility. Other users include the Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit in the department, Extension, SAREP and other researchers from the Department of Ecology and Systematics, Crop and Soil Sciences and the Department of Agriculture and Biological Engineering.

The main building on the facility provides research and office space for students and faculty. The building contains a shop area for building research equipment, several wet labs for analyzing water samples, conducting age and growth studies on fish, and invertebrate identification. The building has several freezers for samples and storage space for research equipment. The grounds of the facility provide an excellent place for the study of the biological control of non-native plant species. There is a greenhouse on the facility that provides a rearing place for both the non-native plants and the insect predators. Researchers have begun rearing the insects on artificial diets in the lab and in the past few years there has been a significant decrease in the amount of purple loosestrife at the facility.

 

Little Moose
Field Station
The Little Moose Field Station serves as the field headquarters for investigations in the Adirondack Mountains, and is located near Old Forge in the southwestern Adirondacks, about three hours from the Cornell campus. Field studies based from the Little Moose Field Station are conducted on public and private waters throughout the Adirondack region, including work on both rivers and lakes. Many studies that are part of the department's Coldwater Fishery Research Program are conducted at the field station. Facilities include a laboratory, offices, research/production hatchery, and living accommodations.
 

Uihlein Sugar
Maple Research
Station
The Uihlein Sugar Maple Research-Extension Field Station, a major part of the Cornell Maple Program, is located near Lake Placid in the Adirondack Mountains. This facility is recognized as the center for sugar maple research and extension for the northeastern US and Canada. It was established in 1965 with the aid of gifts and support from Mr. and Mrs. Henry Uihlein II of Lake Placid. Over two-hundred acres provide for the study of the management, health, and genetic improvement of sugar maple and research in maple sap production and syrup processing. Along with published papers, results of research and projects are disseminated through statewide extension programs and seminars at the field station. Facility tours for scientists, maple producers, and extension educators are also available.