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Northeast Wilderness Trust Announces New Board Members

Northeast Wilderness Trust
August 21, 2024

Northeast Wilderness Trust is pleased to announce two additions to the organization’s Board of Directors. Mark Zankel joins as of August 2024, while Aram Calhoun will officially join in October 2024.

Mark and Aram bring to the Wilderness Trust’s Board decades of experience in the interrelated worlds of ecology and climate. Both are active in their local communities in northern New England, where they champion wilderness protection, climate resilience, and engagement with the natural world.

“With their unique perspectives on community conservation, wetlands ecology, and their deep roots in New Hampshire and Maine, respectively, Mark and Aram are perfect fits for the Wilderness Trust’s Board of Directors,” said Nicie Panetta, Vice President of Advancement. “Their expertise will help inform our conservation decision-making as we work towards a healthier and wilder wilderness landscape in the Northeast. We welcome Mark to the Board this summer and look forward to doing the same for Aram when she joins in October.”

Mark Zankel serves as the Director of Community Solar for ReVision Energy. He and his team work to develop a distributed network of well-sited, community-scale solar energy projects that provide clean, renewable, and affordable energy to households, businesses, non-profits, schools, and municipalities. He and his team focus on expanding access to the financial and environmental benefits of solar for low- and middle-income communities.

photo of Mark Zankel

Prior to ReVision, Mark spent 28 years working for The Nature Conservancy (TNC). He started at TNC in 1994 as an ecologist in North Carolina’s Blue Ridge Mountains and in 2000 became the New Hampshire chapter’s Director of Conservation Programs. Mark then spent a decade as TNC’s New Hampshire State Director and rounded out his TNC tenure as a Global Strategy Advisor in the Chief Conservation Office.

Mark earned a Bachelor of Arts from Dartmouth College, and a Master of Science from the University of Michigan. He and his wife Susan live in Hopkinton, New Hampshire, where they raised their two children, and proudly power their home with two ReVision-installed ground-mount solar arrays. Mark enjoys hiking, biking, snowshoeing and skiing with family and friends, playing guitar, and brewing homemade maple syrup. He is an alumnus and trustee of Leadership NH, sits on the Hopkinton Budget and Energy Committees, and chairs the town’s Community Power Committee. He has also served on the boards of Capital Center for the Arts and Five Rivers Conservation Trust.

Aram Calhoun is Professor Emerita of Wetland Ecology and Conservation in the Department of Wildlife, Fisheries, and Conservation Biology at the University of Maine. Her research focuses on wetland conservation, in particular how vernal pools function as keystone ecosystems. She grew up in the woods of Rhode Island, and mostly stuck to the Ocean State for her studies, attending Brown University (A.B.), Rhode Island College (M.A. in Teaching), and the University of Rhode Island (M.S. in Wetland Ecology).

After earning a doctorate in Wetland Microbiology from the University of Maine, she settled in the state’s wilds. She has spent her career there advocating for wetland and herptile conservation and championing public engagement to protect wetland landscapes at the local level. She helped create the River Union Land Trust, a precursor to today’s Frenchman Bay Conservancy, in the early 1990s. In addition, she has served for nine years on the board of the Forest Society of Maine (FSM) and for three additional years on ad hoc FSM committees on land conservation, governance, and sustainable forestry.

Aram and her husband Mac live in rural Maine, where they write books about wildlife and natural history and explore the state by foot, sea kayak, and white-water canoe. Both are keen birders and “herpers,” which Aram clarifies is not a disease, but rather an addiction to reptiles and amphibians. Aram worked previously with the Wilderness Trust on forever-wild easements on her and Mac’s growing portfolio of “rocks and wastelands in a matrix of trees” in Downeast Maine.

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NORTHEAST WILDERNESS TRUST
17 STATE STREET, SUITE 302
MONTPELIER, VT 05602

802.224.1000

© The Northeast Wilderness Trust 2024    TERMS OF USE    PRIVACY POLICY

Learn more about our Green Guarantee.

Logo for Accredited Land Trust.
A one over a two, meaning one half.
Logo for the Global Rewilding Alliance.
A platinum Seal of Transparency.