|
|
Columns::March 24, 2003
Second in charge: Interim senior vice president named permanent provost
Mens basketball coach, two players suspended; team forgoes postseason
$1.1 million NSF grant funds three-year study of interaction of algebra learning, teaching
Cabinet adopts policy requiring first-year students to live on campus
Symposium marks microbiologys 50th year
Advocates in action
Professor teaches students how to make beautiful music together
Retirees
Newsmakers
Forum essay: What make the world so round
After school specials
Campus News
Famed scientist will discuss biodiversity preservation at spring Charter Lecture
By Larry B. Dendy
ldendy@uga.edu
In his most recent book, titled The Future of Life, famed biologist and naturalist Edward O. Wilson argues that only by
 |
|
Edward Wilson
|
preserving the worlds vast diversity of plant and animal life can we ensure the survival of human life.
Its a message Wilson has long preached as a researcher and writer, and a philosophy that has helped earned him status as one of the worlds foremost living scientists.
But, as he notes in the book, its a caution still widely unheeded as we continue to witness the wreckage of a planet by an exuberantly plentiful and ingenious humanity.
On March 25, Wilson--one of only two people to receive the National Medal of Science and the Pulitzer Prize (twice)--will bring his plea for biodiversity preservation to UGA when he delivers the spring Charter Lecture at 4 p.m. in the Chapel. The talk, based on his book and titled The Future of Life, is open free to the public.
While at UGA, Wilson will receive the first Lifetime Achievement Medal from UGAs new Center for Biological Diversity and Ecosystem Processes. The presentation, at a private event following the lecture, will be part of the official opening of the center, which was started last year to focus research on how scientific processes in ecosystems maintain biodiversity.
Because the lecture is expected to draw a large crowd, arrangements have been made to broadcast it live over UGAs cable network (channel 15 on Charter cable service).
In research on topics ranging from how animal species spread on tropical islands to how ants communicate with chemical signals, Wilson has been influential in shaping modern scientific notions about evolution, human and animal behavior, natural resource preservation and the controversial field of sociobiology, which he is credited with founding.
Blinded in one eye in a childhood accident, Wilson decided as a teenager to devote his career to studying an organism he could easily capture and see--ants. He used ant populations on South Sea islands as a model to help understand how animal species adapt to habitats. This work led to a larger study of animal population patterns on islands, which resulted in his first book, The Theory of Island Biogeography, published in 1967.
Ants figured in much of Wilsons other research, including extensive studies on pheromones, the chemicals ants use to communicate, and social behavior in ant colonies. In 1990, Wilson and German entomologist Bert Holldobler won the Pulitzer Prize for their book The Ants.
It was Wilsons second Pulitzer. His first was for his 1978 book On Human Nature, based on his theories about sociobiology, which focuses on the genetic basis for human behavior. Despite criticism that sociobiology hints at racial superiority and anti-feminism, Wilson won the 1976 National Medal of Science for his work.
In recent years, Wilson has turned his interest increasingly to the importance of preserving the worlds plant and animal life. In books such as Biodiversity and The Diversity of Life, he argues that humans are endangering the planet by eliminating natural habitats, introducing exotic species and overharvesting plants and animals. He says humans are destroying species at a faster rate than any time in history, and predicts that as many as half of all species will disappear by the end of the century if trends arent reversed.
In addition to his Pulitzers, Wilson has received more than 90 other prizes and awards from around the world, including the Crafoord Prize, presented by the Royal Swedish Academy of Science for areas not covered by the Nobel Prize. He also received Japans International Prize for Biology, the National Audubon Societys Audubon Medal and the Gold Medal of the Worldwide Fund for Nature. Time magazine named him one of the 25 most influential people in America, and he was ranked in a 1996 international poll as one of the 100 most influential scientists of all time.
He is on the board of directors of the Nature Conservancy, the American Museum of Natural History and Conservation International.
A native of Birmingham, Ala., Wilson earned bachelors and masters degrees at the University of Alabama. He enrolled in Harvard University in the early 1950s to work on his doctorate and remained there as a faculty member. He is an emeritus professor and honorary curator in entomology for Harvards Museum of Comparative Zoology. |
|
|
|
|