JMU students chosen for inaugural conservation fellowship

JMU News
 

SUMMARY: Launched in March 2025, the program is a partnership between local conservation organizations and area colleges and universities, created to advance natural resource conservation while building a skilled local workforce.


The Shenandoah Valley Conservation Fellowship Program has named James Madison University students Annie Kate Walsh, Nathan Horner, Grace Eiden and Morgan Bailey as its inaugural fellows.

Launched in March 2025, the program is a partnership between local conservation organizations and area colleges and universities, created to advance natural resource conservation while building a skilled local workforce. This year’s fellows are working with the Shenandoah Valley Conservancy, Alliance for the Shenandoah Valley, and the Potomac Conservancy during the spring and summer, with opportunities to continue into the fall semester.

JMU’s Rob Alexander, a fellowship program co-coordinator, said, “The multiple majors represented by our first-year fellows clearly demonstrate that natural resource conservation requires expertise not just in the sciences but across the social sciences and humanities as well.”

Walsh, an anthropology major and environmental humanities minor, also works in the JMU Gender and Science Ethnography Lab. A Valley native, she views conservation work as the defining challenge of her generation. She will lead community engagement initiatives for the Alliance for the Shenandoah Valley.

Horner, an integrated science and technology major, brings experience in using technology to tackle environmental challenges. He will work with the Potomac Conservancy to strengthen data tools for land management and conservation easement stewardship.

Eiden, a communication studies major with a minor in environmental studies, serves as president of the JMU Caving Club and volunteers with On the Road Collaborative in Harrisonburg. She will be an engagement and outreach fellow with the Shenandoah Valley Conservancy.

Bailey, a biology major with a concentration in ecology and environmental biology, has field research experience studying old-growth forests and salamander life cycles. She will assist the conservancy in compiling land management reports for conservation easement stewardship and land protection.

 

 

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by Sarahy Mora Rincon

Published: Thursday, May 8, 2025

Last Updated: Thursday, May 8, 2025

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