Nicholas Institute Faculty Advisory Committee
Stuart
Pimm Doris Duke Professor of Conservation Ecology
Environmental Sciences and Policy Division Stuart Pimm
became a conservation biologist watching species become extinct
in Hawai'i in the 1970s. That experience lead to his commitment
to study the scientific issues behind the global loss of biological
diversity. Pimm has written over 150 scientific papers including
three review articles in Nature and Science and four books
including The Balance of Nature? Ecological issues in the
conservation of species and communities and his new global
assessment of biodiversity's future: The World According to
Pimm: a scientist audits the Earth. His research covers the
reasons why species become extinct, how fast they do so, the
global patterns of habitat loss and species extinction, the
role of introduced species in causing extinction and, importantly,
the management consequences of this research. His commitment
to the interface between science and policy has lead to his
testimony to both House and Senate Committees on the re-authorization
of the Endangered Species Act. Current work includes studies
of endangered species and ecosystem restoration in the Florida
Everglades, and setting priorities for protected areas in
the Atlantic Coast forest of Brazil .
stuartpimm@aol.com





