BOSTON, April 3 – With global warming on the rise, the world faces a number of crucial environmental issues. This October, Elderhostel, the world’s largest not-for-profit educational travel organization for adults, offers a six-night conference in Costa Rica, examining the many issues that surround today’s environmental concerns.

Hosted at Selva Verde Lodge in the lowland tropical rainforests of Costa Rica, the conference takes place in a vital ecological area connecting the rainforests of Costa Rica and Nicaragua.

 
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The locale is home to one of the most delicate ecosystems on earth and because of its tremendous biodiversity, is a microcosm of the many forces at play in conservation issues. Conference participants will learn about biodiversity, population, climate change and proposed solutions by government and conservation organizations. They will also gain an inside look at the National Institute of Biodiversity’s flagship project — a vast digital inventory of Costa Rica’s plants and animals.

Local and international experts, scientists, economists, conservationists and authors will engage participants in a comprehensive look at environmental threats and the policies and sustainable efforts underway to protect the delicate ecosystems. Lecturers connect local and global conservation challenges and share solutions for creating positive environmental changes. Noted speakers include Dr. Thomas Lovejoy, president of the H. John Heinz III Center for Science, Economics and the Environment, and author of Climate Change and Biodiversity; Carlos Manuel Rodríguez, former Minister of Environment and Energy for Costa Rica, and originator of a conservation program in Costa Rica that requires users of a forest’s environmental services to pay the forest’s owners for these rights; and Dr. Alan Pounds, a scientist with the Golden Toad Laboratory for Conservation, whose research findings on amphibians in Monteverde, Costa Rica, have connected the disappearance of frog species with climate change.

“We are very pleased to offer the conference,” said Birgitta Zissis, vice president of International Programs. “This program is an opportunity for discussions to further the understanding of complex factors involved in global warming and in creating positive environmental changes.”

Elderhostel, founded in 1975, is the world’s largest not-for-profit educational travel organization for adults. Approximately 160,000 people enroll in Elderhostel’s nearly 8,000 programs annually. Elderhostel provides exceptional learning adventures throughout the United States and Canada and in more than 90 countries around the world. In 2004, Elderhostel launched Road Scholar to meet the needs of a new generation of independent educational travelers. For more information, please visit www.elderhostel.org or www.roadscholar.org.




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