- Bob Beck
Robert E. Beck Jr. (
September 2 ,1944 -May 24 ,2008 ) was a Guamanianzoologist andconservationist , who worked to save Guam's indigenous native birds from 1982 to 2003. cite news |first=|last=|title=Guam native bird champion dies |url=http://www.guampdn.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080606/NEWS01/806060313/1002|work=Pacific Daily News |publisher= |date=2008-06-06 |accessdate=2008-06-08] Beck championed the plight fight to save Guam's native birds, such as theMariana Crow ,Rufous Fantail ,Guam Flycatcher , Marianas kingfisher and theGuam Rail , known locally asko'ko' inChamorro , which are under the extreme threat ofextinction due to the non-nativebrown tree snake andhabitat loss . The Rufous Fantail and the Guam Flycatcher listed above are now extinct in the wild in their native Guam. However, the captive and wild populations of the Mariana Crow, Guam rail and the Micronesian kingfisher have increased, due in large part to conservation efforts by Beck.Early life
Bob Beck was born in
Hagerstown, Maryland , onSeptember 2 ,1944 . cite news |first=|last=|title=Robert E. Beck Jr., 63 |url=http://www.herald-mail.com/?cmd=displaystory&story_id=195150&format=print |work=Herald Mail |publisher= |date= |accessdate=2008-06-09] His parents were Robert E. Beck Sr. and Ruth Powles Beck. Beck graduated fromHagerstown High School in 1962. He obtained hisbachelor's degree ineducation with a concentration inzoology from the University of Maryland. He completed hismaster's degree in zoology with an emphasis ongenetics andpopulation biology at the University of Maryland, theUniversity of Rhode Island and theUniversity of Tennessee . He started his career as a school teacher in theMontgomery County, Maryland , public school system.Guamanian bird conservation
Beck moved to Guam in 1974 and initially worked as a school teacher for several years. He eventually left teaching to become a zoologist with the Guam Department of Agriculture, Division of Aquatic and Wildlife Resources.
Beck was considered to be instrumental in capturing the remaining native birds on Guam, such as the Guam rail or kingfisher, whose numbers had been decimated due to the accidental introduction of the brown tree snake. Beck, a former Guamanian
Department of Agriculture Division of Aquatic and Wildlife Resources wildlife supervisor, established captive breeding programs on Guam. For example, Beck established a stable breeding population of Guam rails, or ko'ko', in captivity and released them on the neighboring island ofRota , in theNorthern Mariana Islands .Wildlife biologist Gary Wiles was quoted in thePacific Daily News as crediting Beck for saving the species, "Bob was one of the first to begin organizing catching the birds so they could be brought into captivity, held there and bred. He started a captive population. We still have Guam rails today because of his efforts."Beck was also a driving force for the establishment of
captive breeding programs for native Guam rails inzoo s throughout the United States. The Guam rail breeding program initially began at just three zoos, theBronx Zoo , thePhiladelphia Zoo and theSmithsonian National Zoological Park inWashington, D.C. . However, the program has been expanded to include seventeen zoos nationwide, including theAudubon Zoo inNew Orleans and theSan Diego Zoo . There are now over 120 individual Guam rails at the program's facilities on Guam and thirty-five Guam rails on the mainland United States.Bob Beck stayed on Guam and remained involved in his programs following his
retirement in 2003. He died inTamuning, Guam , onMay 24 ,2008 at the age of 63. He was married to his wife, Patricia Rossett, from 1978 until 1992. The couple had two children, Erik R. Beck and Joanna R. Beck.References
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