Anitra Thorhaug
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Anitra Thorhaug | |
|---|---|
Thorhaug at the Annual Club of Rome Conference 2013 in Ottawa, Canada | |
| Born | |
| Alma mater | University of Miami |
| Occupations | Marine biologist, ecophysiologist |
| Known for | Seagrass rehabilitation, conservation and rehabilitation of coastal ecosystems |
| Awards | UNEP Gold Medal (1982) UNEP Global Environmental Forum Global 500 (1987) Earth Trustee Award Medal (1991) Who's Who Women in Environment (2006) |
| Scientific career | |
| Institutions | American Botanical Society, Club of Rome, Yale, GCEEF, UN |
| Thesis | Thermal Effects on Membrane Phenomena (1969) |
Anitra Thorhaug is an American marine biologist, plant ecophysiologist and chemical oceanographer whose extensive work on the rehabilitation of coastal ecosystems has had a substantial influence on national and international policies on conservation around the world.[1] She is president of the Greater Caribbean Energy and Environment Foundation working with the State of Texas on Coastal regeneration, and president of the Institute for Seagrasses. She has had a series of professorships at universities and presently works with the Center for Natural Carbon Capture at the Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies . She is a member of the International Club of Rome and has four times been president of the US Association for the Club of Rome.[2]
Thorhaug studied biology at Smith College, the University of Chicago, Roosevelt University and the University of Oslo in Norway and was awarded a BSc by the University of Miami in 1963. She received an MSc in marine biology from the Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences at the University of Miami in 1965. She carried out research on artificial and living single-cell marine algae membranes at RSMAS and Hopkins Marine Station of Stanford University for which she was awarded a PhD in 1969. Her post-doctoral work (1969–1971) on living plasma membranes using a non-equilibrium thermodynamic framework included work at the Weizmann Institute with Aharon Katchalsky, and at UCLA with Jack Dainty, while continuing to be advised technically by Lawrence R. Blinks of Hopkins Marine Station.