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Ransom A Myers

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Residence
  
Canada

Role
  
Biologist

Name
  
Ransom Myers


Nationality
  
American, Canadian

Fields
  
Biologist

Ransom A. Myers httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Alma mater
  
Rice University Dalhousie University

Died
  
March 27, 2007, Metropolitan Halifax

Education
  
Dalhousie University, Rice University

Institutions
  
Dalhousie University

Ransom a myers lecture series 2011 the oil sands economic saviour or environmental disaster


Ransom Aldrich "Ram" Myers, Jr. (13 June 1952 – 27 March 2007) was a world-renowned American marine biologist and conservationist.

Born in Helena, Mississippi, he was the son of cotton planter, Ransom Aldrich Myers, Sr. and Fay A. Mitchell Myers. At age 16, in 1968, Myers won an international science fair for building an "X-ray crystallograph," which measured the symmetry of atoms.

Myers graduated with a B.Sc. in physics from Rice University in 1974. He earned an M.Sc. in mathematics and a Ph.D. in biology from Dalhousie University in Nova Scotia, Canada. Before joining the faculty of Dalhousie University in 1997 as the first Killam Chair in Ocean Studies, he was a research scientist at the Canadian Department of Fisheries and Oceans in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador.

Myers was best known for his warnings about the worldwide overfishing of the fish stocks in the oceans, in particular, the Atlantic cod and Southern bluefin tuna. As a member of the IUCN shark specialist group, he collected data about the decline of shark populations and brought media attention to threatened shark species. One of Myers' most important areas of research was stock recruitment: collection and analysis of data and the subsequent development of models to predict the survival rate for fish larvae.

In the October 2005 issue of Fortune, Myers was listed among the world's ten people to watch for "working to develop new and better ways to husband the wealth beneath the sea."

He died in Halifax, Nova Scotia, aged 54, from a brain tumor.

References

Ransom A. Myers Wikipedia