Louis Calder Center

Biological field station in New York, US

The Louis Calder Center is Fordham University's biological field station. The Calder Center is a protected forest preserve located 30 miles (48 km) north of New York City in Armonk, New York, and is the only full-time ecological research field station in the New York metropolitan area.

History

The Louis Calder Center was founded in 1967 when paper magnate Louis Calder donated his 113-acre (0.46 km2) estate to Fordham University. Buildings have since been constructed, renovated, and modernized.

Buildings

The Louis Calder Center consists of 19 buildings including:

  • Calder Hall – A 27-room stone mansion which houses seminar rooms, a library, herbarium, insect collection, guest rooms, kitchen, and dining room.
  • McCarthy Laboratories – a building where a great amount of the analysis of samples is carried out. The lab includes growth chambers, a nutrient autoanalyzer, gas chromatograph, HPLC, carbon-nitrogen analyzer, fluorescence and phase microscopes, spectrophotometers, autoclaves, electronic balances, refrigerators, centrifuges, and other scientific equipment.
  • Greenhouses
  • Lakeside Lodge
  • Routh House

Calder Lake

Calder Lake is a 4 hectare mesoeutrophic lake located within the Louis Calder Center. The lake bottom is more than half covered by a submersed macrophyte community, including Vallisneria americana, Elodea canadensis, Potamogeton amplifolius, and Najas flexilis. Since Calder Lake is relatively small, the surrounding flora (including Quercus rubra, Quercus prinus, Acer rubrum, Fagus grandifolia, and Cornus florida) plays a significant role in its ecology, as falling leaves add nutrients to the water. The production rates of bacteria and larger phytoplankton in the lake are limited by the supply of inorganic phosphorus. Dissolved organic carbon exists between 4–6 mg C/L in the lake.

  • v
  • t
  • e
Fordham University
Schools
CampusesResearchBuildingsCultureAthleticsMedia
  • v
  • t
  • e
Protected areas of New York
National Historic
Sites and Historical Parks
National Memorials
National monuments
National Trails
National Seashores
and Recreation Areas
National Wildlife
Refuges
National Forests
Wilderness Areas
State historic sites
Public
preserves
The Nature
Conservacy
  • Accabonac Harbor
  • Andy Warhol Visual Arts
  • Arthur W. Butler Memorial
  • Atlantic Double Dunes
  • Bear Swamp
  • Calverton Ponds
  • Chaumont Barrens
  • Clintonville Pine Barrens
  • Coon Mountain
  • Deer Lick
  • Denton
  • El Dorado Beach
  • Eugene and Agnes Meyer
  • Everton Falls
  • Freund
  • Gadway Sandstone Pavement Barrens
  • Hannacroix Ravine
  • Henry Morgenthau
  • Indian Brook Assemblage
  • Ironsides Island
  • Kenrose
  • Limestone Rise
  • Lisha Kill
  • Long Island Center for Conservation
  • Long Pond
  • Lordsland
  • Lower Poultney River and Saddles
  • Marrion Yarrow
  • Mashomack
  • Mianus River Gorge
  • Mildred E. Grierson Memorial
  • Moccasin Kill
  • Montauk Mountain
  • Moss Lake
  • Mount Holly
  • Nellie Hill
  • Neversink
  • O.D. von Engeln
  • Otter Creek
  • Pawling
  • Peconic Estuary Big Woods
  • Pine Neck
  • Roger Perry Memorial
  • Ruth Wales
  • Schunemunk Mountain
  • Shadmoor
  • Silver Lake Bog
  • Spring Pond Bog
  • Stewart
  • Lewis A. Swyer
  • Thompson Pond and Stissing Mountain
  • Uplands Farm
  • West Branch
  • Whitbeck Memorial Grove
Other
preserves
Other (lists)
Portals:
  • flag New York City
  • icon Catholicism

41°07′28″N 73°43′49″W / 41.124571°N 73.730297°W / 41.124571; -73.730297


Stub icon

This article about a university or college in New York is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e