• Source: Patricia Wright (primatologist)
  • Patricia Chapple Wright (born September 10, 1944) is an American primatologist, anthropologist, and conservationist. Wright is best known for her extensive study of social and family interactions of wild lemurs in Madagascar.
    She established the Institute for the Conservation of Tropical Environments at Stony Brook University. She worked extensively on conservation and contributed to the establishment of the Ranomafana National Park in Madagascar.


    Early life


    Patricia Wright was born in Doylestown, Pennsylvania, on 10 September 1944 to Julia Delores, a school librarian and Hugh Edward Chapple, a foundry supervisor.


    Education


    Wright obtained a bachelor's degree in biology in 1966 from Hood College. She later went on to obtain her Ph.D. in Anthropology from City University of New York in 1985 under the direction of Warren Kinzey.


    Madagascar


    In 1986 Wright traveled to Madagascar in search of the greater bamboo lemur (Prolemur simus), a species abundant at the sub-fossil lemur sites of the north but believed to have gone extinct in the recent past. She found that the greater bamboo lemur still exists and discovered a new species that was named Hapalemur aureus, the golden bamboo lemur.


    Centre ValBio


    Patricia Wright established the Institute for the Conservation of Tropical Environments at Stony Brook University that is dedicated to science-based conservation and research in the tropics, with a special focus on Madagascar. It coordinates the work of many natural and social scientists throughout Madagascar, especially around Ranomafana National Park. It operates a modern research station in Madagascar called Centre ValBio.


    Awards and recognition




    = Awards

    =

    2022 - Conservation Warrior Award Winner from Seneca Park Zoo, Rochester, NY
    2018 – Finalist for the St Andrews Prize for the Environment
    2014 – First Woman Winner of Indianapolis Prize for Conservation
    2014 – Featured in CNN's Parts Unknown with Anthony Bourdain
    2014 – Lifetime Achievement Award from Wildlife Conservation Film Festival
    2014 – Honorary Degree (Honoris Causa) from University of Fianarantsoa, Madagascar
    2014 – Featured in 3D IMAX film Island of Lemurs: Madagascar with Morgan Freeman
    2013 – Elected to American Philosophical Society
    2012 – Awarded Commandeur Medal of Honor, Government of Madagascar
    2011 – Finalist for the Indianapolis Prize for Conservation
    2008 – Stony Brook University Faculty Achievement Award
    2008 – Hauptman Woodward Pioneer in Science Medal
    2008 – Distinguished Primatologist Award from American Society of Primatologists
    2007 – Awarded Honoris Causa, honorary degree from University of Antananarivo
    2007 – Ranomafana National Park named UNESCO World Heritage Site
    2006 – A new species from Kalambatritra, Madagascar named Lepilemur wrighaeti
    2006 – Cosmos Prize Selection Committee, Osaka, Japan
    2006 – Explorers Club Lecture Series
    2006 – 2010 Member of Smithsonian Biodiversity Task Force
    2004 – Elected AAAS Fellow
    2004 – "Medaille Officier de Madagascar". High honor awarded by the President of Madagascar
    2003 – "Woman of Distinction" Award, given by Senator Kenneth LaValle
    2003 – -2011 Member of National Geographic Conservation Trust
    2003 – Royal Geographical Society Invited Speaker, London, United Kingdom
    2002 – James Watson Presidential Council speaker at Symposium "Human Behavior in the Genomic Age" Cold Spring Harbor, NY
    2002 – National Research Council, The National Academies Committee
    2001 – 2009-Member of National Geographic Committee for Research and Exploration
    2001 – Provost's Lecture Series, SUNY Stony Brook
    2000 – Present Member of Board of Directors of Comparative and Conservation Biology Foundation
    2000 – "Principal Investigator of the Year." Earthwatch Institute
    1998 – 2003 Member of International Society of Primatology Conservation Committee
    1995 – 1998 Advisory Board of Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research
    1995 – "Chevalier d'Ordre National." National Medal of Honor of Madagascar, from the President of Madagascar
    1995 – Women in Science Engineering Annual Award, SUNY
    1994 – present Madagascar Faunal Group, International Board
    1994 – 2000 Scientific Advisory Board member of The Douroucouli Foundation
    1994 – present Advisory Board of Primate Conservation Inc.
    1994 – 1996 Advisory Board of the Center for Tropical Conservation, Duke University
    1994 – Women of the Year in Science Award, Three Village Times, New York
    1993 – 2001 Member of Board, Organization for Tropical Studies
    1993 – 1999 Member of Board of Trustees of The Nature Conservancy, Long Island Chapter
    1993 – Women Who Make a Difference Award, Family Circle Magazine
    1990 – present Member of the Editorial Board of the International Journal of Primatology
    1991 – present Member of External Advisory Board, Duke University Primate Center
    1991 – present IUCN Primate Specialists Group-Madagascar
    1990 – Honorary Doctor of Science Degree from Hood College
    1990 – 1991 Member of National Research Council Committee for Sustained Development & Environmental Preservation of Humid Tropics
    1989 – John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Fellow
    1988 – 1994 Member of Conservation Committee for American Society of Primatologists
    1984 – present IUCN Primate Specialists Group-South America
    1982 – "S.L. Washburn Prize" for outstanding student paper at the American Association of Physical Anthropologists meeting, Eugene, Oregon


    Media




    = TV and films

    =
    2016 – featured on Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown, CNN
    2014 – featured in IMAX film Island of Lemurs: Madagascar
    2009 – featured on Dan Rather Reports, HDNet TV
    2002 – featured in David Attenborough's The Life of Mammals documentary film.
    2000 – Me & Isaac Newton, directed by Michael Apted, a Clear Blue Sky Production; Emmy award winner.


    = Print and radio features

    =
    2009/10 – National Geographic Magazine
    2008/09 – BBC Natural History Unit (UK) and NHK Japan featured NSF Project
    2006 – featured in Smithsonian Magazine, April cover article "For the Love of Lemurs"
    2006 – interviewed in Award-winning National Public Radio show Life on Earth, Madagascar Biodiversity produced by Dan Grossman.
    2005 – Natural History Magazine June cover article "Dance of the Sexes"
    2005 – featured in Long Island Life, Newsday, February 206


    = Books

    =
    2014 – For the Love of Lemurs: My Life in the Wilds of Madagascar published by Lantern Books ISBN 978-1590564455
    2013 – High Moon Over the Amazon: My Quest to Understand the Monkeys of the Night published by Lantern Books ISBN 9781590564219
    2011 – Larrey, Frederic; Wright, Patricia C.; Giraud, Cyril. Madagascar: The Forest of Our Ancestors. France: Regard du Vivant Press. ISBN 978-2952996921.
    2003 –Wright, Patricia C.; Simons, Elwyn L.; Gursky, Sharon, eds. (2003). Tarsiers: Past, Present and Future. Piscataway, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press. ISBN 0813532361.


    Taxon named in her honor


    The rainbowfish Rheocles wrightae, is a species of rainbowfish in the subfamily Bedotiinae, the Madagascar rainbowfishes.
    Wright's sportive lemur (Lepilemur wrighti)


    References



    Conniff, Richard (April 2006). "For the Love of Lemurs". Smithsonian. Vol. 37, no. 1. Smithsonian Institution. pp. 102–109. Retrieved 2012-05-07.


    External links


    Centre ValBio
    Director Sharon Pieczenik's video interview
    PBS special on Wright's sifaka research
    Interview with Dr. Wright

Kata Kunci Pencarian: