英国鸟类学家联盟 - 戈德曼-萨尔文奖

IF 16.4 1区 化学 Q1 CHEMISTRY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
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Dee's commitment to penguins has influenced policy of governments at multiple levels, contributed to the development and success of a suite of students under her tutelage, inspired countless field volunteers and other lay people to fight for all wild animals and places, and has left an indelible mark of how natural history field research is fundamental to the conservation of all species.</p><p>Having obtained a Bachelors of Science with Honours from Central Michigan University in 1969, Dee embarked on what can only be described as an incredible field adventure culminating in a PhD in Zoology from The Ohio State University. Her dissertation, entitled ‘The Galapagos Penguin: A Study of Adaptations for Life in an Unpredictable Environment’, was the result of multiple visits to those remote Galapagos Islands from 1970 to 1972, which at first found her camping alone at Pta. Espinosa, Fernandina, for weeks at a time, focusing her energy in beginning to understand why these amazing penguins so near to the equator continued to persist. Such a solo adventure would probably not be possible for a young scientist today, and indeed, her advisor insisted she take a field assistant on future visits. But, solo or otherwise, even at the start of her career, Dee Boersma was extraordinary, driven and intensely focused on her goals. Fifty+ years later, those traits persist.</p><p>With PhD in hand, in 1974 Dee migrated westward to the Pacific coast of the US and joined the Department of Zoology at the University of Washington, spending time in numerous departments and programmes across campus, and working her way to Professor of Zoology in 1988 (to be transferred to Professor of Biology in 1993). After a 10-year foray in the wilds of Alaska, with fork-tailed storm petrels the focus of her always intense passion for life in the field, Dee was asked to return to her roots and the penguins of the south, but this time in Argentina. With pressure from the world of international fashion's desire to use the leather of Magellanic penguins for golfing gloves, Dee was asked to initiate studies on the close cousins of her beloved Galapagos penguins, to provide scientific data to influence the Argentine government to not collect penguins for gloves. With her data contributing to the successful denial of penguin harvesting, Dee never looked back, and has spent more than 40 years returning to her beloved Punta Tombo and the Magellanic penguins of Patagonia. In addition, after a multi-year hiatus, Dee also returned to her literal research birthplace in the Galapagos and has added a second amazing long-term data set to her Magellanic penguins, documenting the survival of the northern-most penguin species, and building them nests out of lava in a place where perhaps they just shouldn't really be able to survive. But there they are. Never hugely abundant, but always seeming to persist ….</p><p>Back in Argentina in the early years there, Dee, her students and countless volunteers spent hours walking hundreds of kilometres of the Patagonian coastline, recording what ultimately were thousands of oiled penguin carcasses on the wind-swept beaches. With those data in hand and the famous tenacity that is the Boersma style, the Argentine government ultimately passed laws to push the oil tanker lines farther offshore. That relatively simple solution resulted in a near complete elimination of oiling in penguins off the Patagonian coast of Argentina. No computer modelling, no technical satellite tracking. Simply feet on the ground and hours on the clock along the Patagonian coastline. Basic solid science. Ultimately, years later, more solid data from the Boersma lab contributed to the creation of one of the first coastal zone marine protected areas off the coast of South America!</p><p>Years of painstakingly monitoring breeding success of individuals – going year after year to see if ‘those birds’ again returned to ‘that nest’ – has created a long-term database that has few equals. One jokes with Dee that there are still thousands of questions to be answered in the hundreds of field data books that are now a part of a database of epic proportions – again, collected from hundreds of feet on the ground and hours … no, years … of data collection. But she and her team continue to return to Punta Tombo, to continue to collect more data to answer more questions.</p><p>What questions have been examined in these 40+ years? A perusal of her recent CV tells us there are two books, 28 book chapters, more than 150 peer-reviewed scientific publications and myriad pieces in the popular press for which a summary here will be woefully inadequate. Data from her lab have shown where penguins go when out at sea both during their breeding seasons and during the long winter months. The importance of the time at sea, inherently more difficult to measure than time on land, has been made clearer from the many penguins that have assisted in the collection of these data. As well, the natural history of Magellanic penguins is now much more understood: who mates with who? … why? … how long? And, with years of repeated data from many individuals, the ability to examine how environmental conditions and anthropogenic activities affect the success of Magellanic penguins and their lifetime reproductive success is impressive … as these penguins can live upwards of 30 years! 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It is therefore quite exciting and appropriate to have her name added to the esteemed list of recipients of the Godman-Salvin Prize from the British Ornithologists' Union for her lifetime of work in the study of not only penguins, but for her overall contribution to the understanding of how best we should work to conserve all species for which we share this planet.</p><p>Brian G. 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And in their own way, the thousands – perhaps millions – of penguins that Dee has observed and collected data from over the last 50+ years, and indeed, all species of penguins on our globe, send a raucous thank you to her years of devotion to their cause. Dee's commitment to penguins has influenced policy of governments at multiple levels, contributed to the development and success of a suite of students under her tutelage, inspired countless field volunteers and other lay people to fight for all wild animals and places, and has left an indelible mark of how natural history field research is fundamental to the conservation of all species.</p><p>Having obtained a Bachelors of Science with Honours from Central Michigan University in 1969, Dee embarked on what can only be described as an incredible field adventure culminating in a PhD in Zoology from The Ohio State University. Her dissertation, entitled ‘The Galapagos Penguin: A Study of Adaptations for Life in an Unpredictable Environment’, was the result of multiple visits to those remote Galapagos Islands from 1970 to 1972, which at first found her camping alone at Pta. Espinosa, Fernandina, for weeks at a time, focusing her energy in beginning to understand why these amazing penguins so near to the equator continued to persist. Such a solo adventure would probably not be possible for a young scientist today, and indeed, her advisor insisted she take a field assistant on future visits. But, solo or otherwise, even at the start of her career, Dee Boersma was extraordinary, driven and intensely focused on her goals. Fifty+ years later, those traits persist.</p><p>With PhD in hand, in 1974 Dee migrated westward to the Pacific coast of the US and joined the Department of Zoology at the University of Washington, spending time in numerous departments and programmes across campus, and working her way to Professor of Zoology in 1988 (to be transferred to Professor of Biology in 1993). After a 10-year foray in the wilds of Alaska, with fork-tailed storm petrels the focus of her always intense passion for life in the field, Dee was asked to return to her roots and the penguins of the south, but this time in Argentina. With pressure from the world of international fashion's desire to use the leather of Magellanic penguins for golfing gloves, Dee was asked to initiate studies on the close cousins of her beloved Galapagos penguins, to provide scientific data to influence the Argentine government to not collect penguins for gloves. With her data contributing to the successful denial of penguin harvesting, Dee never looked back, and has spent more than 40 years returning to her beloved Punta Tombo and the Magellanic penguins of Patagonia. In addition, after a multi-year hiatus, Dee also returned to her literal research birthplace in the Galapagos and has added a second amazing long-term data set to her Magellanic penguins, documenting the survival of the northern-most penguin species, and building them nests out of lava in a place where perhaps they just shouldn't really be able to survive. But there they are. Never hugely abundant, but always seeming to persist ….</p><p>Back in Argentina in the early years there, Dee, her students and countless volunteers spent hours walking hundreds of kilometres of the Patagonian coastline, recording what ultimately were thousands of oiled penguin carcasses on the wind-swept beaches. With those data in hand and the famous tenacity that is the Boersma style, the Argentine government ultimately passed laws to push the oil tanker lines farther offshore. That relatively simple solution resulted in a near complete elimination of oiling in penguins off the Patagonian coast of Argentina. No computer modelling, no technical satellite tracking. Simply feet on the ground and hours on the clock along the Patagonian coastline. Basic solid science. Ultimately, years later, more solid data from the Boersma lab contributed to the creation of one of the first coastal zone marine protected areas off the coast of South America!</p><p>Years of painstakingly monitoring breeding success of individuals – going year after year to see if ‘those birds’ again returned to ‘that nest’ – has created a long-term database that has few equals. One jokes with Dee that there are still thousands of questions to be answered in the hundreds of field data books that are now a part of a database of epic proportions – again, collected from hundreds of feet on the ground and hours … no, years … of data collection. But she and her team continue to return to Punta Tombo, to continue to collect more data to answer more questions.</p><p>What questions have been examined in these 40+ years? A perusal of her recent CV tells us there are two books, 28 book chapters, more than 150 peer-reviewed scientific publications and myriad pieces in the popular press for which a summary here will be woefully inadequate. Data from her lab have shown where penguins go when out at sea both during their breeding seasons and during the long winter months. The importance of the time at sea, inherently more difficult to measure than time on land, has been made clearer from the many penguins that have assisted in the collection of these data. As well, the natural history of Magellanic penguins is now much more understood: who mates with who? … why? … how long? And, with years of repeated data from many individuals, the ability to examine how environmental conditions and anthropogenic activities affect the success of Magellanic penguins and their lifetime reproductive success is impressive … as these penguins can live upwards of 30 years! And, now, with human activities driving changes at the global level, 40+ years of data provide the power to begin to quantify how global climate change can affect species.</p><p>It is rare to find a life lived as Dee Boersma has lived hers. And while her published work should speak for itself, her long list of awards and honours speak further to her success and influence. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

作为一个在美国中西部地区长大的孩子,年轻的 P. Dee Boersma 也许不太可能梦想着终生在南半球偏远的野外地点集中精力研究黑白相间的不会飞的鸟类。但是,企鹅(偶尔也会有一些其他物种)才是这位依然留着拖把头的 P. Dee Boersma 博士毕生的研究对象。迪伊在过去 50 多年中观察和收集了数以千计--也许是数以百万计--的企鹅的数据,事实上,全球所有种类的企鹅都以自己的方式对她多年来为企鹅事业的奉献表示衷心的感谢。迪伊对企鹅的承诺影响了多级政府的政策,促进了她指导的一批学生的发展和成功,激励了无数野外志愿者和其他普通人为所有野生动物和地方而奋斗,并在自然史野外研究如何成为保护所有物种的基础方面留下了不可磨灭的印记。1969 年,迪伊在中密歇根大学获得理学荣誉学士学位后,便开始了一场不可思议的野外探险,最终在俄亥俄州立大学获得了动物学博士学位。她的论文题目是 "加拉帕戈斯企鹅:1970年至1972年期间,她曾多次前往偏远的加拉帕戈斯群岛,起初她独自一人在埃斯皮诺萨岛(Pta. Espinosa)、费尔南迪纳岛(Fernandina)和加拉帕戈斯群岛(Galapagos)露营。起初,她独自一人在费尔南迪纳岛的埃斯皮诺萨岛露营,一住就是几个星期,集中精力开始研究为什么这些神奇的企鹅会在如此靠近赤道的地方生存下来。对于今天的年轻科学家来说,这样的独自探险可能是不可能的,事实上,她的指导老师坚持要她在以后的探访中带上一名野外助手。但是,无论是否是独自一人,即使是在她职业生涯的起步阶段,迪-伯尔斯玛也是非凡的、充满动力的,并且非常专注于她的目标。1974 年,迪伊手持博士学位,向西迁徙到美国太平洋沿岸,加入华盛顿大学动物学系,在整个校园的许多部门和项目中工作,并于 1988 年晋升为动物学教授(1993 年转为生物学教授)。迪伊在阿拉斯加的荒野中生活了 10 年,她对野外生活始终充满热情,重点研究对象是叉尾风暴海燕,之后她应邀回到自己的故乡,回到南方的企鹅身边,但这次是在阿根廷。由于国际时尚界希望使用麦哲伦企鹅的皮革制作高尔夫球手套,迪伊应邀开始对她心爱的加拉帕戈斯企鹅的近亲进行研究,以提供科学数据,影响阿根廷政府不收集企鹅制作手套。由于她的数据成功地阻止了企鹅的捕猎,迪伊再也没有回头,她花了 40 多年的时间回到她心爱的蓬塔通博和巴塔哥尼亚的麦哲伦企鹅身边。此外,在中断多年后,迪伊还回到了她的研究发源地加拉帕戈斯,为她的麦哲伦企鹅增添了第二个惊人的长期数据集,记录了最北端企鹅物种的生存情况,并在熔岩中为它们筑巢,也许它们真的不应该在那里生存。但它们就在那里。迪伊和她的学生们以及无数的志愿者们花了数小时在巴塔哥尼亚海岸线上行走了数百公里,记录下了数以千计的企鹅尸体。有了这些数据,再加上博尔斯玛著名的坚韧不拔的精神,阿根廷政府最终通过了法律,将油轮的航线推到了更远的海上。这个相对简单的解决方案几乎完全消除了阿根廷巴塔哥尼亚海岸企鹅的油污问题。没有计算机建模,没有技术卫星跟踪。只需在巴塔哥尼亚海岸线上脚踏实地,按时工作。这就是扎实的基础科学。最终,多年后,来自博尔斯玛实验室的更多可靠数据促成了南美洲海岸首批海岸带海洋保护区的建立!多年来,迪伊煞费苦心地监测个体的繁殖成功率--年复一年地观察 "那些鸟儿 "是否再次回到 "那个巢穴"--建立了一个鲜有匹敌的长期数据库。迪伊开玩笑说,在数百本野外数据手册中,仍有成千上万的问题有待解答,而这些数据手册现在已成为史诗般规模的数据库的一部分--同样,这些数据也是从数百英尺的地面上和数小时......不,数年......的数据收集中收集而来的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

British Ornithologists’ Union – Godman Salvin Prize

British Ornithologists’ Union – Godman Salvin Prize

As a child growing up deep in the Midwest of the United States, it was perhaps unlikely that young, tow-headed P. Dee Boersma dreamed of a lifetime spent in remote field locations in the southern hemisphere focusing her intensely inquisitive mind on black and white flightless avifauna. But, it's penguins (with some other species thrown in here and there for good measure) that have been what the still tow-headed Dr P. Dee Boersma has devoted her life to. And in their own way, the thousands – perhaps millions – of penguins that Dee has observed and collected data from over the last 50+ years, and indeed, all species of penguins on our globe, send a raucous thank you to her years of devotion to their cause. Dee's commitment to penguins has influenced policy of governments at multiple levels, contributed to the development and success of a suite of students under her tutelage, inspired countless field volunteers and other lay people to fight for all wild animals and places, and has left an indelible mark of how natural history field research is fundamental to the conservation of all species.

Having obtained a Bachelors of Science with Honours from Central Michigan University in 1969, Dee embarked on what can only be described as an incredible field adventure culminating in a PhD in Zoology from The Ohio State University. Her dissertation, entitled ‘The Galapagos Penguin: A Study of Adaptations for Life in an Unpredictable Environment’, was the result of multiple visits to those remote Galapagos Islands from 1970 to 1972, which at first found her camping alone at Pta. Espinosa, Fernandina, for weeks at a time, focusing her energy in beginning to understand why these amazing penguins so near to the equator continued to persist. Such a solo adventure would probably not be possible for a young scientist today, and indeed, her advisor insisted she take a field assistant on future visits. But, solo or otherwise, even at the start of her career, Dee Boersma was extraordinary, driven and intensely focused on her goals. Fifty+ years later, those traits persist.

With PhD in hand, in 1974 Dee migrated westward to the Pacific coast of the US and joined the Department of Zoology at the University of Washington, spending time in numerous departments and programmes across campus, and working her way to Professor of Zoology in 1988 (to be transferred to Professor of Biology in 1993). After a 10-year foray in the wilds of Alaska, with fork-tailed storm petrels the focus of her always intense passion for life in the field, Dee was asked to return to her roots and the penguins of the south, but this time in Argentina. With pressure from the world of international fashion's desire to use the leather of Magellanic penguins for golfing gloves, Dee was asked to initiate studies on the close cousins of her beloved Galapagos penguins, to provide scientific data to influence the Argentine government to not collect penguins for gloves. With her data contributing to the successful denial of penguin harvesting, Dee never looked back, and has spent more than 40 years returning to her beloved Punta Tombo and the Magellanic penguins of Patagonia. In addition, after a multi-year hiatus, Dee also returned to her literal research birthplace in the Galapagos and has added a second amazing long-term data set to her Magellanic penguins, documenting the survival of the northern-most penguin species, and building them nests out of lava in a place where perhaps they just shouldn't really be able to survive. But there they are. Never hugely abundant, but always seeming to persist ….

Back in Argentina in the early years there, Dee, her students and countless volunteers spent hours walking hundreds of kilometres of the Patagonian coastline, recording what ultimately were thousands of oiled penguin carcasses on the wind-swept beaches. With those data in hand and the famous tenacity that is the Boersma style, the Argentine government ultimately passed laws to push the oil tanker lines farther offshore. That relatively simple solution resulted in a near complete elimination of oiling in penguins off the Patagonian coast of Argentina. No computer modelling, no technical satellite tracking. Simply feet on the ground and hours on the clock along the Patagonian coastline. Basic solid science. Ultimately, years later, more solid data from the Boersma lab contributed to the creation of one of the first coastal zone marine protected areas off the coast of South America!

Years of painstakingly monitoring breeding success of individuals – going year after year to see if ‘those birds’ again returned to ‘that nest’ – has created a long-term database that has few equals. One jokes with Dee that there are still thousands of questions to be answered in the hundreds of field data books that are now a part of a database of epic proportions – again, collected from hundreds of feet on the ground and hours … no, years … of data collection. But she and her team continue to return to Punta Tombo, to continue to collect more data to answer more questions.

What questions have been examined in these 40+ years? A perusal of her recent CV tells us there are two books, 28 book chapters, more than 150 peer-reviewed scientific publications and myriad pieces in the popular press for which a summary here will be woefully inadequate. Data from her lab have shown where penguins go when out at sea both during their breeding seasons and during the long winter months. The importance of the time at sea, inherently more difficult to measure than time on land, has been made clearer from the many penguins that have assisted in the collection of these data. As well, the natural history of Magellanic penguins is now much more understood: who mates with who? … why? … how long? And, with years of repeated data from many individuals, the ability to examine how environmental conditions and anthropogenic activities affect the success of Magellanic penguins and their lifetime reproductive success is impressive … as these penguins can live upwards of 30 years! And, now, with human activities driving changes at the global level, 40+ years of data provide the power to begin to quantify how global climate change can affect species.

It is rare to find a life lived as Dee Boersma has lived hers. And while her published work should speak for itself, her long list of awards and honours speak further to her success and influence. Highlights include being chosen as a Pew Fellow in Conservation and the Environment, a Leopold Fellow, AAAS Fellow, the recipient of the 15th Heinz Award for the Environment, a Fulbright Senior Fellowship to the University of Otago, New Zealand, the Pacific Seabird Group Lifetime Achievement Award, a Lifelong Learning Award from the University of Washington, and election to the American Academy of Arts & Sciences in 2021. It is therefore quite exciting and appropriate to have her name added to the esteemed list of recipients of the Godman-Salvin Prize from the British Ornithologists' Union for her lifetime of work in the study of not only penguins, but for her overall contribution to the understanding of how best we should work to conserve all species for which we share this planet.

Brian G. Walker

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来源期刊
Accounts of Chemical Research
Accounts of Chemical Research 化学-化学综合
CiteScore
31.40
自引率
1.10%
发文量
312
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: Accounts of Chemical Research presents short, concise and critical articles offering easy-to-read overviews of basic research and applications in all areas of chemistry and biochemistry. These short reviews focus on research from the author’s own laboratory and are designed to teach the reader about a research project. In addition, Accounts of Chemical Research publishes commentaries that give an informed opinion on a current research problem. Special Issues online are devoted to a single topic of unusual activity and significance. Accounts of Chemical Research replaces the traditional article abstract with an article "Conspectus." These entries synopsize the research affording the reader a closer look at the content and significance of an article. Through this provision of a more detailed description of the article contents, the Conspectus enhances the article's discoverability by search engines and the exposure for the research.
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