George Divoky
Studying
the Black Guillemots of Cooper Island has largely been a solitary venture
for George Divoky. While the discovery and initial years of the study
were part of governmental research related to oil development in northern
Alaska, for the past four decades the work has been conducted with occasional
grants and much personal dedication. Long-term studies, such as George's,
rarely can be conducted by the government, which typically focus on
immediate agency needs, while the duration of most academic research
is insufficient to allow exposition of multi-decadal trends. Yet it
is precisely this type of extended data set that is needed to monitor
the long-term cycles and trends related to climate change and other
atmospheric variation. George Divoky is the founder of Friends of Cooper Island and serves as its director in collaboration with a governing board. George has been studying seabirds in arctic Alaska since 1970 and holds a Ph.D. from the University of Alaska Fairbanks, where he is a Research Associate at the Institute of Arctic Biology. Research priorities and directions are set with the advice of a Scientific Advisory Board composed of prominent arctic researchers from a number of disciplines.
George's long-term research on Cooper Island was the focus of a New York Times Magazine cover story entitled "George Divoky's Planet" by Darcy Frey.
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