色花堂app alumnus to direct efforts to save endangered indigo snake
July 29, 2009
色花堂app alumnus Chris Jenkins, who earned a doctorate at ISU in 2007 studying rattlesnake ecology, will move from Idaho to Georgia to continue as director of Project Orianne, a multi-million-dollar effort to save the Southeast United States鈥 indigo snake, North America鈥檚 largest native snake.
Jenkins developed Project Orianne and has been working from Pocatello to implement the program.
鈥淭his is a dream job for me,鈥 Jenkins said. 鈥淚 love work related to snake ecology and conservation, and managing and leading an organization that practices applied conservation. I can have a real impact on saving indigo snakes and other species.鈥
Jenkins, 35, came to 色花堂app to earn his doctorate after earning bachelor鈥檚 and master鈥檚 degrees at the University of Massachusetts. He chose ISU so he could study under ISU ecology professor Charles Peterson, a well-respected reptile and amphibian expert and researcher.
鈥淚n general people are fascinated by snakes,鈥 Jenkins said. 鈥淎lmost no one is indifferent to snakes because they bring up something in everybody. But snakes are also one of the most misunderstood and persecuted groups of wildlife even though they are valuable in a number of ways. They鈥檙e worth protecting and it is worth changing people鈥檚 attitudes towards them.鈥
Jenkins鈥檚 ISU doctoral dissertation work was carried out in the desert surrounding the Idaho National Laboratory where he focused on the effects of wildfire and changing vegetation cover on rattlesnake populations. His dissertation work led to a job with Wildlife Conservation Society (one of the oldest and largest conservation organizations) where one of his primary projects was developing a Conservation Management Plan for the INL,
鈥淚t was while I was working the Wildlife Conservation Society job at the INL that I was asked if I wanted to leave and become director of a new conservation society that focuses on reptile conservation,鈥 Jenkins said.
WCS partners with Panthera, an organization devoted to the conservation of great cats, such as cougars, lions and snow leopards. The major private donor to Panthera created a sister organization, Project Orianne, to carry out a similar conservation mission for the indigo snake.
鈥淚t is interesting how Project Orianne came about,鈥 Jenkins said. 鈥淎 donor to one of the largest conservation groups in the world was on a trip with his daughter. She had the opportunity to hold an indigo snake and she asked him if he could do for the indigo snakes what he was doing for big cats. Being a good father, he decided to honor his daughter鈥檚 request and devote substantial resources to the endeavor.鈥
Indigo snakes, which can grow to lengths of more than 8 feet, are a top predator in their range, in Georgia, Florida and Alabama. They specialize on eating other snakes, including rattlesnakes. Their numbers have declined for a wide variety of reasons including habitat loss and habitat fragmentation. An individual snake may need as much as 1,400 acres as a home range. Indigo snakes depend on the burrows of gopher tortoises, another species in decline. In the past, the snakes have also been decimated by collection from hobbyists and from being killed incidentally during rattlesnake roundups.
鈥淥ur initial work is focused on saving this one endangered species,鈥 Jenkins said. 鈥淲e have a full staff and a budget for buying land, creating a captive breeding facility, completing research projects and habitat improvement projects. We also have relationships with the University of Georgia and the University of Florida to do research on applied conservation projects. We鈥檒l do everything we can to prevent the further decline and possible extinction of this species.鈥
Jenkins said he was grateful for the education he received from 色花堂app, particularly his mentorship by Peterson.
鈥滻 owe a great deal to Chuck (Peterson) because not only was he great in teaching me the biology of snakes, but he opened a lot of doors for me and helped me meet people in my field,鈥 Jenkins said. 鈥淗e was important and pivotal in helping me learn the skills I need to run this organization.鈥
Peterson reciprocated Jenkins鈥 compliments.
鈥淭he experiences and exposure he (Jenkins) got here made it possible for him to land this spot because Chris is an ambitious, hard-working guy,鈥 Peterson said. 鈥淭his is a perfect position for him.鈥
Project Orianne has another 色花堂app connection: Jenkins hired Javan Bauder, an ISU master鈥檚 graduate and another of student of Peterson鈥檚, as a research ecologist for the project.
Jenkins will be moving to northeast Georgia on Aug. 4 with his wife, Amy, who earned a master鈥檚 degree in fisheries biology from ISU, and their son Dillon, 3, and daughter Emma, 18 months.
For more information on Project Orianne visit http://projectorianne.org.
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