ESA members have elected David Inouye, a plant ecologist and professor emeritus 
of the Department of Biology at the University of Maryland, College Park, to 
lead the Society as president of the board of directors for the 2014-15 year. 
Inouye stepped into the post this August at the 99th Annual Meeting of the 
Ecological Society.

"I'm greatly honored to be leading the ESA as it reaches its 100th anniversary. 
I've been a member for over four decades, since I was a graduate student, and 
have watched and participated as the Society has grown in membership, number 
and prestige of journals published, size of its annual meeting, and all other 
metrics of success," said Inouye.

"The Washington, D.C. office provides a valuable service to government and 
other organizations by making the expertise of its membership available for 
advice on ecological issues, and we have an excellent educational program that 
is helping to train a diverse next generation of ecologists. We will also 
expand our international impact this year as we jointly publish a new journal 
with the Ecological Society of China. I look forward to the next century of 
growth and success by the Society," Inouye said."

Inouye's pollinator and wildflower research has encompassed pollination 
biology, flowering phenology, plant demography and plant-animal interactions in 
both the US and abroad since 1971. Over his 44-year tenure at the Rocky 
Mountain Biological Lab near Crested Butte, Colorado, Inouye has discovered 
that the wildflower growing season has increased by 35 days since the 1970s. 
His long-term studies of flowering phenology and plant demography are providing 
insights into the effects of climate change at high altitudes.

He is a lead author for the Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and 
Ecosystem Services (IPBES) fast-track assessment of pollinators, pollination 
and food production, sits on the governing boards of the North American 
Pollinator Protection Campaign and the USA-National Phenology Network, is a is 
a member of the National Academy of Sciences Roundtable on Public Information 
in the Life Sciences, and serves on numerous scientific publication editorial 
boards.

Inouye has taught courses in ecology and conservation biology at UMD and also 
instructed at the University of Colorado's Mountain Research Station, the Rocky 
Mountain Biological Laboratory, and with the Organization for Tropical Studies.

http://www.esa.org/esablog/ecology-in-the-news/news-events/david-inouye-elected-esa-president-for-the-societys-100th-year/
 

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