Scroll to continue

Reservations

Bruce Presents: Penguins! Past, Present, and the Future

Thursday, June 15, 2023, 6:00-7:30 pm

Dr. Dee Boersma has travelled across the globe, from the sandy beaches of Argentina to rocky outcroppings on the Galapagos Islands, all in an effort to observe the daily lives of penguins.  Now, the renowned penguin expert flies from Washington state to join us at the Bruce Museum. On Thursday, June 15th, at 6pm EST, Dr. Boersma will present her lecture “Penguins in the Era of the 6th Great Extinction.” Discover how Dr. Boersma and her team banded over 40,000 Magellanic Penguins and find out what lies ahead for the future of penguin conservation.a will present her lecture “Penguins in the Era of the 6th Great Extinction.” Discover how Dr. Boersma and her team of researchers banded over 40,000 Magellanic Penguins in Punta Tombo and find out what lies ahead for future penguin conservation.

Bruce Presents: Penguins! Past, Present, and the Future will begin at 6:00pm on Thursday, June 15th, 2023, in the Gale and Robert H. Lawrence, Jr., and Pamela and Robert Goergen Auditorium. This program will also be livestreamed online.

Support for Bruce Presents is generously provided by Berkley One, a Berkley Company.

Space is limited. Online registration required.

Scroll to continue

Reservations for Live-stream event.

Bruce Presents: Penguins! Past, Present, and the Future - Live-Stream

Dr. Dee Boersma

About Dr. Boersma:

Dr. Boersma is the Director of the Center for Ecosystem Sentinels at the University of Washington in the Department of Biology and holds the Wadsworth Endowed Chair in Conservation Science. Fieldwork has always been her passion, and her work spans 5 decades. In the 1970's she started working with Galápagos penguins to determine how many there were, and now is trying to expand their population by providing high quality nests. Fork-tailed storm-petrels in Alaska kept her busy for a decade, and her Magellanic penguins studies in Argentina continued for over 40 years. She enjoys the penguin colony because it is noisy, bustling with activity, is over 100 miles from the nearest city, and often internet free. Dr. Boersma's studies helped move tanker lanes farther offshore to decrease the number of penguins swimming through petroleum and informed legislation for Marine Protected areas in the Province of Chubut, Argentina. She's been honored as a finalist for the Indianapolis Prize three times. In 2020 she endowed the Boersma Chair in Natural History and Conservation in the Center for Ecosystem Sentinel to ensure a place for long-term conservation studies at the university.

Share with a friend