Daniel H. Janzen
Daniel Hunt Janzen is an American evolutionary ecologist, and conservationist. He divides his time between his professorship in biology at the University of Pennsylvania, where he is the DiMaura Professor of Conservation Biology, and his research and field work in Costa Rica.
Janzen and his wife Winifred Hallwachs have catalogued the biodiversity of Costa Rica. Through a DNA barcoding initiative with geneticist Paul Hebert, they have registered over 500,000 specimens representing more than 45,000 species, which has led to the identification of cryptic species of near-identical appearance that differ in terms of genetics and ecological niche.
They helped to establish the Area de Conservación Guanacaste World Heritage Site, one of the oldest, largest and most successful habitat restoration projects in the world.
Early life and education
Daniel Hunt Janzen was born January 18, 1939 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. His father, Daniel Hugo Janzen, grew up in a Mennonite farming community and served as Director of the United States Fish and Wildlife Service. His father and mother, Miss Floyd Clark Foster of Greenville, South Carolina, were married on April 29, 1937.Janzen obtained his B.Sc. degree in biology from the University of Minnesota, in 1961, and his Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley in 1965.
Career
In 1963, Janzen attended a two-month course in tropical biology taught in several field sites throughout Costa Rica. This Advanced Science Seminar in Tropical Biology was the precursor to a Fundamentals in Tropical Biology course, which Janzen designed for the Organization for Tropical Studies, a consortium of several North American and Costa Rican universities. Janzen went back in 1965 as an instructor and has lectured in at least one of the three yearly courses every year since.Janzen taught at the University of Kansas, the University of Chicago and at the University of Michigan before joining the faculty at the University of Pennsylvania. There he is the DiMaura Professor of Conservation Biology, and his research and field work in Costa Rica.
Janzen has also held teaching positions in Venezuela, and in Puerto Rico.
Research
Janzen's early work focused on the careful and meticulous documentation of species in Costa Rica, and in particular on ecological processes and the dynamics and evolution of animal-plant interactions.In 1967, for example he described the phenological specialization of bee-pollinated species of Bignoniaceae, amongst them a "kind of mass flowering", which Alwyn Howard Gentry in his classification of flowering named Type 4 or "big bang" strategy.
Miguel Altieri in his textbook Agroecology: The Science of Sustainable Agriculture says: "Janzen's 1973 article on tropical agroecosystems was the first widely read evaluation of why tropical agricultural systems might function differently from those of the temperate zones".
In 1985, realizing that the area in which they worked was threatened, Janzen and Hallwachs expanded the focus of their work to include tropical forest restoration, expansion and conservation.
Through a DNA barcoding initiative with geneticist Paul Hebert, they have registered over 500,000 specimens representing more than 45,000 species, which has led to the identification of cryptic species of near-identical appearance that differ in terms of genetics and ecological niche.Janzen and Hallwachs have supported species barcoding initiatives at both national and international levels through the Instituto Nacional de Biodiversidad, CBOL and iBOL.
Coevolution of plants and animals
- Coevolution of a mutualistic system in New World tropics between species of Acacia, v. gr., Acacia cornigera, and the ant Pseudomyrmex ferruginea. Acacia spp in the Neotropics are protected by ants against defoliation; for this, the ants are rewarded by means of special organs and physiology that Acacia has evolved.
- Spondias mombin lost its megafauna seed dispersors in the Pleistocene. Between fire in open pastures and seed predation by bruchid beetles in closed-canopy forest, S. mombin does not stand a chance. But, today, in Guanacaste, seeds are dispersed by White-tailed deer and some 15 other mammals, that feed mostly in forest edges, where bruchids are less likely to find the seeds and fires are not so frequent.
Tropical habitat restoration
In 1985, realizing that widespread development in northwestern Costa Rica was rapidly decimating the forest in which they conducted their research, Janzen and Hallwachs expanded the focus of their work. They began with the Parque Nacional Santa Rosa, which included of pasture and relictual neotropical dry forest and of marine habitat. This eventually became the Área de Conservación Guanacaste, located just south of the Costa Rica-Nicaragua border, between the Pacific Ocean and the Cordillera de Tilaran which integrated four different national parks. Together these house at least 15 different biotopes, viz and ca. 4% from world's plant, mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, fishes and insects diversity, all within an area less than. It is one of the oldest, largest and most successful habitat restoration projects in the world. As of 2019, it consists of. The park exemplifies their beliefs about how a park should be run. It is known as a center of biological research, forest restoration and community outreach.
Janzen and his wife helped to establish the Area de Conservación Guanacaste World Heritage Site, one of the oldest, largest and most successful habitat restoration projects in the world. As of 2019, it consists of, located just south of the Costa Rica-Nicaragua border, between the Pacific Ocean and the Cordillera de Tilaran. The park exemplifies their beliefs about how a park should be run. It is known as a center of biological research, forest restoration and community outreach.
Habitat restoration is not a simple matter. Not only must one fight against hundreds of years of ecological degradation, manifested in the form of altered drainage patterns, hard to eradicate pastures, compacted soils, exhausted seed banks, diminished adult and propagule stocks, proliferation of fire-resistant and unpalatable weeds from the old world tropics and sub-tropics.
Also one is faced with the difficulties of changing a culture which coevolved with, profited from and can become miserable with such a system.
For this reason ACG was conceived as a cultural restoration project, which, to paraphrase its natural counterpart, ought to be grown as well. ACG integrates complementary processes of experimentation, habitat restoration and cultural development.
The techniques used include:
- Active restoration, artificial dispersal of propagules from plant species native to the Guanacaste habitats
- Passive restoration by means of fire, anti-poaching and hervivory control
- Ecological education and sensibilisation
Personal life
Honorary distinctions
Janzen has been subject to recognition many times in the USA, as well as in Europe and Latin America; the monetary endowments of these prizes have been invested in the trust fund of the ACG or another of his conservation's projects in Costa Rica; amongst the 19 prizes and distinctions, the following are the most important:- 1975, The Henry Allan Gleason Award, Botanical Society of America
- 1984, Crafoord Prize: Coevolutionary ecology. Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
- 1985, Distinguished Teaching Award, University of Pennsylvania
- 1987, The Berkeley Citation for Distinguished Achievement and Notable Service to the University, University of California, Berkeley
- 1987, Hijo Ilustre de Guanacaste
- 1987, Global 500 Roll of Honour, UNEP
- 1989, MacArthur Fellowship
- 1989, Leidy Award, Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences
- 1991, Founder's Council Award of Merit, Field Museum of Natural History
- 1992, Member, National Academy of Sciences, USA
- 1993, Award for Improvement of Costa Rican Quality of Life, Universidad de Costa Rica.
- 1994, Silver Medal Award, International Society of Chemical Ecology.
- 1995, Global Service Award, Society for Conservation Biology
- 1996, Honorary Doctor of Science, University of Minnesota.
- 1996, Thomas G. and Louise E. DiMaura Endowed Term Chair, University of Pennsylvania
- 1997, Kyoto Prize, Inamori Foundation
- 2002, Albert Einstein World Award of Science, ,
- 2002, Honorary Fellow of the Association for Tropical Biology
- 2006, Winner, National Outdoor Book Awards, for 100 Caterpillars: Portraits from the Tropical Forests of Costa Rica, Design & Artistic Merit Category.
- 2011, BBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge Award of Ecology and Conservation Biology for his pioneering work in tropical ecology and his contributions to the conservation of endangered tropical ecosystems throughout the world, drawing on an understanding of plant-animal interactions. Janzen acknowledged the role of his wife and long-term research partner, ecologist Winnie Hallwachs, to the work being recognized.
- 2013, Wege Foundation $5 million grant to the Guanacaste Dry Forest Conservation Fund, founded in 1997 by Dan Janzen and Winnie Hallwachs.
- 2014, Blue Planet Prize, from the Asahi Glass Foundation
Publications