{"title":"Jon Edward Ahlquist, 1944–2020","authors":"F. Sheldon","doi":"10.1093/auk/ukaa050","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Jon Edward Ahlquist died on May 7, 2020, at the age of 75. Thirty years ago, Jon was one of the most famous ornithologists in the world, co-recipient of the 1988 Daniel Giraud Elliot Medal from the National Academy of Sciences and winner of the 1983 Edward’s Prize from the Wilson Ornithological Society. He was also an outstanding bird watcher, artist, and photographer. Yet few ornithologists ever met Jon, let alone knew him as a colleague or friend. He rarely attended American Ornithologists’ Union (AOU) or other scientific meetings, he was not an Elective Member or Fellow of the AOU, and he disappeared from mainstream academia in 1994, only to reemerge in 2017 as a scientific spokesperson for Creationism (https://creation.com/jon-ahlquist). Even for those of us who knew him, Jon was largely an enigma, in many ways open and giving but in others private and almost mysterious. We all realized, however, that Jon was a brilliant intellectual with an encyclopedic knowledge of birds, art, classical music, language, food, photography, and more. He could be hysterically funny, shockingly profane, and outrageous in dress and lifestyle. Although he played a pioneering role in the development of molecular systematics, no one outside a small circle of colleagues knew what he actually did because he never promoted himself publicly and was completely overshadowed and dominated by his mentor and partner of 28 years, Charles G. Sibley. Jon was born on July 27, 1944, the only child of Lula and Arvid Ahlquist. He was raised speaking Finnish in Ashtabula, Ohio, on the edge of Lake Erie, where he developed his bird watching and artistic skills. He had a major showing of his paintings at age 14 and published his first paper (a breeding bird census) at 16. At Ashtabula High School Jon was president of the National Honor Society, editor of the school newspaper, art editor for the yearbook, and valedictorian. Upon graduation, in 1962, he headed to Cornell, drawn not only to its ornithology program but also by Cornell’s historic role in American bird art. Upon arrival, Jon found himself rubbing elbows with such illustrious undergraduates as James Brown and Douglas Futuyma, and postgrads Alan Brush, Joanna Burger, Kendall Corbin, Herb Hendrickson, and Neal Smith. As soon as he arrived, Jon sought out Charles Sibley, who was at that time a renowned professor of zoology. His arrival in Sibley’s lab was described in a 2011 email from Neal Smith to Kevin Winker:","PeriodicalId":382448,"journal":{"name":"The Auk","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-08-13","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"The Auk","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1093/auk/ukaa050","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
乔恩·爱德华·阿尔奎斯特于2020年5月7日去世,享年75岁。三十年前,乔恩是世界上最著名的鸟类学家之一,1988年美国国家科学院丹尼尔·吉拉德·埃利奥特奖章的共同获得者,1983年威尔逊鸟类学会爱德华奖的获得者。他还是一位杰出的观鸟者、艺术家和摄影师。然而,很少有鸟类学家见过乔恩,更不用说把他当作同事或朋友了。他很少参加美国鸟类学家联盟(AOU)或其他科学会议,他不是AOU的选举成员或研究员,他于1994年从主流学术界消失,直到2017年才以神创论的科学发言人的身份重新出现(https://creation.com/jon-ahlquist)。即使对我们这些认识他的人来说,乔恩在很大程度上也是一个谜,在许多方面,他是开放的,给予的,但在其他方面,他是私密的,几乎是神秘的。然而,我们都意识到,乔恩是一个才华横溢的知识分子,对鸟类、艺术、古典音乐、语言、食物、摄影等方面都有渊博的知识。他可以歇斯底里地搞笑,令人震惊地亵渎,在穿着和生活方式上令人发指。尽管他在分子系统学的发展中发挥了先锋作用,但除了一小群同事之外,没有人知道他到底做了什么,因为他从未公开推销自己,而且完全被他28年的导师和合作伙伴查尔斯·g·西布里(Charles G. Sibley)所掩盖和支配。乔恩出生于1944年7月27日,是卢拉和阿维德·阿尔奎斯特的独子。他在俄亥俄州伊利湖边上的阿什塔布拉长大,说芬兰语,在那里他培养了观鸟和艺术技能。14岁时,他举办了一次大型画展,16岁时发表了第一篇论文(繁殖鸟类普查)。在阿什塔布拉高中,乔恩是全国荣誉协会的主席,校报的编辑,年鉴的美术编辑,以及致告别辞的代表。1962年毕业后,他前往康奈尔大学,不仅被其鸟类学项目所吸引,也被康奈尔大学在美国鸟类艺术领域的历史地位所吸引。刚到这里,乔恩就发现自己和一些杰出的本科生,如詹姆斯·布朗和道格拉斯·富图玛,以及研究生艾伦·布拉什、乔安娜·伯格、肯德尔·科尔宾、赫伯·亨德里克森和尼尔·史密斯交往甚密。乔恩一到那里就找到了查尔斯·西布里,他当时是一位著名的动物学教授。尼尔·史密斯(Neal Smith)在2011年写给凯文·温克(Kevin Winker)的一封电子邮件中描述了他来到西布里实验室的情况:
Jon Edward Ahlquist died on May 7, 2020, at the age of 75. Thirty years ago, Jon was one of the most famous ornithologists in the world, co-recipient of the 1988 Daniel Giraud Elliot Medal from the National Academy of Sciences and winner of the 1983 Edward’s Prize from the Wilson Ornithological Society. He was also an outstanding bird watcher, artist, and photographer. Yet few ornithologists ever met Jon, let alone knew him as a colleague or friend. He rarely attended American Ornithologists’ Union (AOU) or other scientific meetings, he was not an Elective Member or Fellow of the AOU, and he disappeared from mainstream academia in 1994, only to reemerge in 2017 as a scientific spokesperson for Creationism (https://creation.com/jon-ahlquist). Even for those of us who knew him, Jon was largely an enigma, in many ways open and giving but in others private and almost mysterious. We all realized, however, that Jon was a brilliant intellectual with an encyclopedic knowledge of birds, art, classical music, language, food, photography, and more. He could be hysterically funny, shockingly profane, and outrageous in dress and lifestyle. Although he played a pioneering role in the development of molecular systematics, no one outside a small circle of colleagues knew what he actually did because he never promoted himself publicly and was completely overshadowed and dominated by his mentor and partner of 28 years, Charles G. Sibley. Jon was born on July 27, 1944, the only child of Lula and Arvid Ahlquist. He was raised speaking Finnish in Ashtabula, Ohio, on the edge of Lake Erie, where he developed his bird watching and artistic skills. He had a major showing of his paintings at age 14 and published his first paper (a breeding bird census) at 16. At Ashtabula High School Jon was president of the National Honor Society, editor of the school newspaper, art editor for the yearbook, and valedictorian. Upon graduation, in 1962, he headed to Cornell, drawn not only to its ornithology program but also by Cornell’s historic role in American bird art. Upon arrival, Jon found himself rubbing elbows with such illustrious undergraduates as James Brown and Douglas Futuyma, and postgrads Alan Brush, Joanna Burger, Kendall Corbin, Herb Hendrickson, and Neal Smith. As soon as he arrived, Jon sought out Charles Sibley, who was at that time a renowned professor of zoology. His arrival in Sibley’s lab was described in a 2011 email from Neal Smith to Kevin Winker: