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Odum (right) with Shelford (center)

Odum-Kendeigh Endowment Supports Ecology Program...


Odum


Kendeigh

In 1996, Eugene P. Odum (PhD Zoology ’39) made a gift to the University—and also issued a challenge. With his gift of $25,000 to establish an endowed fund to support graduate student research in ecology, Odum challenged alumni and friends of eco-logical research and education to match his gift. If they would do so, then Odum agreed to contribute another $25,000 to the endowment.

In January 2000 that challenge was met, based in large part on the generosity of Robert V. Kennedy (BS ’55, MS Zoology ’58). Kennedy told a surprised student caller during the annual fund drive of his wish to make a major gift of stock to this endowment.

Odum requested that the endowment honor his mentor at the University of Illinois, S. Charles Kendeigh. The College decided to honor Odum as well, so the fund became the Eugene P. Odum—S. Charles Kendeigh Endowment.

Ecology at the University has a tradition of excellence, dating back to the early 1900s. Victor Shelford, a professor of Zoology from 1914 to 1947, was instrumental in developing the field of animal ecology in North America.

S. Charles Kendeigh, a student of Shelford, earned his PhD from Illinois in 1930. In 1936 he returned to Illinois as Shelford’s understudy, and together they made Illinois a major center for ecology. Kendeigh pioneered ecological energetics, a major component of both population and eco-system ecology. Kendeigh was mentor to 111 graduate students, including Odum.

Odum is considered one of the most influential figures in the history of ecology in the 20th century. For more than half a century, he challenged scientific assumptions about the world around us. His textbook Fundamentals of Ecology, first published in 1953, influenced an entire generation of ecologists.

Odum, called the "father of modern ecology," has been at the University of Georgia since 1940, and was director of its Institute of Ecology, as well as Callaway Professor of Ecology. He retired in 1984, but remains active in promoting the awareness of ecology nationwide.

Evan DeLucia, director of the Program in Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, a new interdepartmental graduate program at Illinois, commented, "We are taking giant steps toward creating a new structure for ecology on campus. With this endowment, we can build a solid foundation of support for our graduate students—the heart of the program!"

 

School of Integrative Biology

School of Molecular & Cellular Biology

University of Illinois

This newsletter is published by the School of Integrative Biology and the School of Molecular and Cellular Biology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Editor: Jana Waite.  Send comments and suggestions to j-waite@life.uiuc.edu

Updated 12/07/00