43 Facts About Jane Lubchenco

1.

Jane Lubchenco was born on December 4,1947 and is an American environmental scientist and marine ecologist who teaches and conducts research at Oregon State University.

2.

Jane Lubchenco was born on December 4,1947, and grew up in Denver, Colorado, the oldest of six sisters.

3.

Jane Lubchenco attended St Mary's Academy, a Catholic girls high school.

4.

Jane Lubchenco attended graduate school at the University of Washington where she combined experimental and evolutionary approaches to marine ecology for her thesis on competition between sea stars.

5.

Jane Lubchenco's dissertation dealt with the population and community ecology of rocky sea shores in New England, in particular the role of herbivores, competition among seaweeds, and seaweed defenses against grazers.

6.

Jane Lubchenco served as chair of the Department of Zoology from 1989 to 1992 and in 1993 was named Distinguished Professor of Zoology.

7.

Jane Lubchenco took a leave of absence from Oregon State University to serve as NOAA Administrator.

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8.

Jane Lubchenco has been a research associate at the Smithsonian Institution while she conducted research at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute in Panama.

9.

Jane Lubchenco has taught courses or conducted extended research at the University of the West Indies, Kingston, Jamaica ; Universidad Catolica de Chile, Santiago, Chile ; Institute of Oceanography, Academia Sinica, Qingdao, China ; and University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand.

10.

In 2021, the editors of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences retracted an article for which Jane Lubchenco served as editor.

11.

Jane Lubchenco created three organizations devoted to helping scientists become better communicators.

12.

In 2007, Jane Lubchenco co-founded Climate Central, a not-for-profit, non-advocacy organization whose mission is to communicate the science of climate change to US audiences in a manner that is understandable, relevant, credible and useful.

13.

Jane Lubchenco has been a member of the Pew Oceans Commission, the Joint Oceans Commission Initiative, the Aspen Institute Arctic Commission, and the Council of Advisors for Google Ocean.

14.

Jane Lubchenco has served the scientific community through leadership in numerous professional societies.

15.

Jane Lubchenco was president of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the International Council for Science, and the Ecological Society of America.

16.

Jane Lubchenco served two terms as a Presidentially nominated, Senate-confirmed Member of the National Science Board and was elected to the Council of the National Academy of Sciences and appointed to its executive committee.

17.

Jane Lubchenco has been on the editorial boards of many of the major journals in her field.

18.

Jane Lubchenco led the effort of the Ecological Society of America to identify scientific research priorities ; this effort, called the Sustainable Biosphere Initiative, charted a new course for the professional scientific society toward more use-inspired science.

19.

Dr Jane Lubchenco currently oversees these efforts and is an active contributor to MPA research and discussions.

20.

Jane Lubchenco was part of a study on the potential of well-managed marine reserves to mitigate and promote climate change adaptation by limiting direct anthropogenic stressors, enabling species recovery, and restoring habitat complexity.

21.

Jane Lubchenco is currently working on an international collaboration to bring clarity and transparency to global MPA design and reporting.

22.

Jane Lubchenco served as Under Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere and Administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration from 2009 to 2013.

23.

Jane Lubchenco was nominated by President-Elect Barack Obama as a part of his new "Science Team" in December 2008, confirmed by the Senate on March 19,2009, and sworn in on March 20,2009.

24.

Jane Lubchenco served as Administrator for nearly four years until her resignation on February 27,2013.

25.

Jane Lubchenco is both the first woman and the first marine ecologist to occupy the post.

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26.

Jane Lubchenco oversaw the formulation of NOAA's first scientific integrity policy, the implementation of Congress' instructions to end overfishing in US waters by having management plans for every fishery, the restructuring of the program responsible for building the next generation of weather satellites, and assisted with the creation of the first National Ocean Policy for the United States.

27.

Jane Lubchenco helped to strengthen science in the agency in a number of ways.

28.

Jane Lubchenco led NOAA's response and coordination with 13 other agencies.

29.

Jane Lubchenco was frequently interviewed by the media as a federal science expert, and helped disseminate the working knowledge of the response to the public.

30.

Jane Lubchenco actively participated in the President's Interagency Ocean Policy Task Force and attended all of the six regional meetings across the country to gather stakeholder input.

31.

Jane Lubchenco led NOAA's efforts to develop MSA management plans, which specify annual catch limits and accountability measures for each fishery.

32.

The problems identified by the review were addressed when Jane Lubchenco initiated a top-to-bottom overhaul of the program, including improvements to policy for assessing penalties, limited use of civil funds, updates to its National and Division Enforcement Priorities with stakeholder input, and a plan to create enforcement positions that better ensure compliance.

33.

Jane Lubchenco teamed up with the Commissioner of Fisheries for the European Union, Maria Damanaki to initiate a more serious effort to address illegal fishing and level the playing field for law-abiding fishermen.

34.

Jane Lubchenco worked to see international treaties on IUU fishing approved and strengthened the use of science and precaution in making decisions by regional fishery management organizations.

35.

Jane Lubchenco said, "Creating a new generation of climate services to promote public understanding, support mitigation and adaptation efforts, enable smart planning, and promote regional climate partnerships" were some of the things she was most proud of during her tenure.

36.

Dr Jane Lubchenco has said that "bizarre, crazy weather" came to define her term as NOAA Administrator.

37.

Under the lead of Dr Jane Lubchenco, NOAA launched the "Weather-Ready Nation" initiative in the summer of 2011 to help build resilience and improve on-the-ground response to extreme weather and water events.

38.

On December 4,2014, Jane Lubchenco was appointed the US Department of State's first Science Envoy for the Ocean by Secretary of State John Kerry.

39.

Jane Lubchenco applied information and experiences gained as a 'global diplomat for the ocean' to advise the White House, State Department, and US science community.

40.

In 2016, Jane Lubchenco continued her work as SEO, travelling to China and Indonesia.

41.

In Indonesia, Jane Lubchenco helped facilitate the creation of a working partnership between Indonesian Ministry of Marine Affairs and Fisheries and UC Santa Barbara scientists to help build technical capacity for fisheries management in Indonesia that is informed by good science.

42.

Jane Lubchenco's teaching, scientific achievements and work in furthering communication between science and the public have brought numerous honors, including:.

43.

Jane Lubchenco has shifted her focus to conducting research that informs sustainable use of oceans and has worked on a range of interrelated topics including aquaculture, fisheries, climate change, biodiversity, ecosystem services, dead zones, ecosystem approaches to management and marine reserves.