The Ecology Book

(Elliott) #1

DIRECTORY 335


Potsdam, he studied at several
universities before becoming a zoology
professor at the University of Jena in


  1. Haeckel was the first biologist
    to propose the kingdom Protista—for
    organisms that are neither animal nor
    vegetable—and he researched and
    painstakingly recorded tiny deep-
    sea protozoans called radiolaria.
    See also: Evolution by natural selection
    24–31


WILLIAM BLAKE RICHMOND
1842–1921

Best known as a British artist, sculptor,
and designer of stained glass and
mosaics, London-born Richmond
became an environmental activist
after having to endure the poor light
and smoky air produced by London’s
winter coal fires. In 1898 he founded
the Coal Smoke Abatement Society
(CSAS) to lobby politicians for clean
air. The CSAS was instrumental in the
introduction of the UK’s Public Health
(Smoke Abatement) Act in 1926 and
the Clean Air Act in 1956.
See also: Pollution 230–235

THEODORE ROOSEVELT
1858–1919

To deal with severe childhood asthma,
Roosevelt became an active sportsman
and outdoorsman, developing a lifelong
passion for nature. When, in 1900, he
stood as William McKinley’s running
mate in the US presidential election, he
did so on a ticket of peace, prosperity,
and conservation. Roosevelt became
the 26th President when McKinley was
assassinated in 1901, and went on to
establish the US Forest Service, five
new national parks, 51 bird reserves,
and 150 national forests.
See also: Deforestation 254–259

JÓSEF PACZOSKI
1864–1942

Paczoski was a Polish ecologist, born
in what is now Ukraine. He studied
botany at the University of Kiev and

went on to pioneer phytosociology, the
study of natural plant communities, first
using the term in 1896. In the 1920s
Paczoski established the world’s first
institute of phytosociology, at the
University of Poznan, where he was
professor of plant systematics. An
accomplished botanist, he published
works on central European flora,
including that of the Białowieza Forest,
which he managed as a national park.
See also: Organisms and their
environment 166

JACK MINER
1865–1944

Also known as “Wild Goose Jack,” Miner
moved with his family from the US to
Canada in 1878. He was illiterate until
the age of 33 but embarked on local
conservation projects, such as building
winter feeding stations for Bobwhites.
He was one of the first people in North
America to put aluminum bands on
birds’ legs to track their movements. A
duck banded by him, and later seen
in South Carolina, was the first banding
recovery made in North America. Miner
is thought to have banded more than
90,000 wildfowl, helping establish
a huge database of migration routes.
See also: Citizen science 178–183

JAMES BERNARD HARKIN
1875–1955

Sometimes referred to as the “father
of Canadian national parks,” Harkin had
a passion for politics and conservation.
In 1911, he was appointed the first
commissioner of the Canadian National
Parks Agency and oversaw the
establishment of Point Pelee, Wood
Buffalo, Kootenay, Elk Island, Georgian
Bay Islands, and Cape Breton Highlands
national parks. Harkin realized the
commercial value of the parks, and
his policy of encouraging road-building
to attract tourists was not universally
popular. He was a prime mover behind
legislation to regulate the hunting
of migrant birds in 1917.
See also: Endangered habitats 236–239,
Deforestation 254–259

MARJORY STONEMAN DOUGLAS
1890–1998

A formidable campaigner for the
protection of the Florida Everglades,
Douglas was also a successful journalist
and author, suffragist, and campaigner
for civil rights. Her 1947 book The
Everglades: River of Grass was
influential in building an appreciation
of the Florida wetlands, and in 1969 she
founded the Friends of the Everglades
to defend the area from draining for
development. Douglas remained active
well into her second century, and at
the age of 103 she was awarded the
Presidential Medal of Freedom.
See also: Citizen science 178–183

BARBARA MCCLINTOCK
1902–1992

In 1983 McClintock became the first
solo woman to win the Nobel Prize in
Physiology or Medicine, and the first
American woman to win any unshared
Nobel Prize. The award recognized her
discovery—more than 30 years before—
of transposable genetic elements, or
“jumping genes,” which sometimes
create or reverse mutations. As a
cytogeneticist concerned with how
chromosomes relate to cell behavior, she
also discovered the first genetic map
for corn—linking physical traits with
regions of the chromosome—and the
mechanism by which chromosomes
exchange information.
See also: The role of DNA 34–37

JACQUES COUSTEAU
1910–1997

French undersea explorer Cousteau was
well known as the presenter of several
documentaries on the aquatic world.
After inventing underwater breathing
apparatus called the Aqua-Lung in
1943, he worked with the French Navy
to clear underwater mines after World
War II. He later converted the Calypso,
a former minesweeper, into a research
vessel from which he explored the
oceans, writing several books and

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