David Cameron Duffy (born September 1, 1953)[1] is an American professor of
botany and
zoology at the
University of Hawaiʻi, former Director of the Hawaiian Pacific Island Cooperative Ecosystem Studies Unit.[citation needed] and currently holds the Gerritt Parmele Wilder Chair in the School of Life Sciences at the University of Hawaiʻi Manoa.
After graduating from Princeton, Duffy became a resident scientist in the
Galápagos Islands, but was asked to take on the job of interim director of the
Charles Darwin Research Station when it faced closing because of a budget deficit and conflict with Ecuadorian authorities. He found funding and restored relations with the Ecuadorians, while finding time to do some research.[citation needed]
Duffy next moved to the
University of Cape Town where he ran the
seabird component of the Benguela Ecology Project, again producing research on seabirds and their interactions with fisheries.[4] Concurrently, he and his colleagues began research in the Chilean sector of the
Humboldt Current.[5] Duffy began simple models of upwelling
trophic relations that were to predate many non-linear models for marine ecosystems.[6]
In 1986, Duffy and his family moved to Costa Rica where he created the Centro de Documentacion en Vida Silvestre (Biodoc) in
Heredia, Costa Rica as part of a
United States Fish and Wildlife Service sponsored wildlife management graduate program in which Duffy was one of the first professors.[7]
Two years later, he moved to the
University of Georgia where he became the executive officer of the International Congress of Ecology, under the direction of Frank Golley. At the same time he began his "landmark" research on the biodiversity of
eastern old growth forests and their recovery from clear cutting, which generated controversy among
United States Forest Service scientists.[8][9]
Duffy then moved to
Long Island where he was briefly head of the Seatuck Foundation before becoming principal investigator on a cooperative project on
Lyme disease with the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in
Shelter Island. His work focused on the landscape ecology of Lyme disease and the role of deer and seabirds in the transmission of the disease.[10][11]
Afterward, Duffy moved to
Alaska where he led the Alaska Heritage Program at the
University of Alaska Anchorage. His main research there focused on the biodiversity of the Alaskan landscape in relation to protected areas,[12] but he also led the five-year multimillion-dollar APEX (Alaska Predator Ecological Experiment) which monitored the recovery of seabirds following the Exxon Valdezoil spill.[13]
He then moved directing the Pacific Cooperative Studies where as of 2019 he was responsible for supervising 300 employees in approximately 30 cooperative projects with state, federal, and private agencies averaging $14 million a year, focusing on natural and cultural management in Hawaiian and Pacific natural areas and their managemenrt.[14][15][16][17] His research ranged from the effects of feral cats and mongoose, especially on island fauna,[18][19][20][21][22] effects of avian malaria ( ) , ecology and management of seabirds in Hawaii,[23] At the same time he continued his work on migration of Arctic and Aleutian Terns, seabirds of Rapa Nui (Easter Island) and Galapagos, and on diease and hosts on islands.[24][25]
Research and publications
Duffy is the author of over 100 scientific publications and the founding editor of the journal Waterbirds. Additionally, he was editor of Colonial Waterbirds from 1997-2000. His research has involved how species, ecosystems, and landscapes recover from perturbations, both man-made and natural.[26]
His initial research focused on the birds of the Humboldt upwelling off Peru but expanded to include their relations with their parasites ticks and their prey Anchoveta Engraulis ringens,
In 2019 he was awarded a lifetime achievement award from the Pacific Seabird Group for "major contributions to seabird ecology and science-based efforts to conserve seabirds" [28] and was elected a fellow of the American Ornithological Society.[29] In 2022 he was named a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science [30]
In 2020 he became editor of Pacific Science a 75-year old publication [31]
References
^U.S. Public Records Index Volume 1 (Provo, Utah: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.), 2010.