
Time to #GetMotivated ATLiens!
Meet Jordan Herring, a local #GreenATLien making the world greener through soybean genetic lab research at UGA. Soy as a crop is often derided by environmental conservationists because of the deforestation caused by soybean farming, particularly in rainforest regions in South America. Jordan is working with a team of scientists at UGA to increase soybean crop yields and improve disease resistance so that soy crops may take a smaller acreage to produce the same yield needed to supply global food chains.
Originally from Decatur, Jordan was first inspired to pursue conservation work during a high school summer internship led by The Nature Conservancy where he and other students learned how to identify and remove invasive species at St. Simons. As an undergraduate at UGA Jordan became a Doris Duke Conservation scholar, spending his first summer internship studying the effects of dams on fish ecology along the Colorado River and then the following summer engrossed in research on the effects of the BP oil spill on sea turtles in Miami. In case you weren’t sure whether or not Jordan is a friend of the fishes, he’s also dedicated time to on-site research of the effects of tourism on fish migration in the Great Salt Pond of Bainbridge Island, Rhode Island.
Through his studies Jordan became increasingly interested in the impacts of environmental conditions on human health. To pursue this interest further, Jordan completed an Environmental Health and Safety internship where he monitored the impacts of a Georgia aluminum manufacturer on local water and air quality, as well as worker health. Not long after Jordan graduated with his bachelor’s in Environmental Health at UGA.
In the future, Jordan envisions opening a nonprofit organization that will educate and mobilize low-income Atlanta youth to improve local air and water quality, greenspace access, and food security.
Jordan’s #calltoaction is to learn more about what your local recycling service does and doesn’t accept to prevent recycling contamination. Be sure also to check out Jordan’s eco-travel blog Jordan and the Traveling Peach @_jtpjourneys 🖖👽








