| September
28, 2005
Scripps Oceanography Marine Ecologist
To Receive Prestigious Diving Award
NOGI Award
will be presented by the
Academy of Underwater Arts and Sciences
By Mario Aguilera
Paul Dayton,
professor of oceanography at Scripps Institution of Oceanography,
University of California, San Diego, has been selected as winner
of the 2004 NOGI Award, science category, by the Academy of
Underwater Arts and Sciences.
NOGI recipients will
be presented with their award statuettes at the annual NOGI
Awards Dinner in Las Vegas on October 6, 2005.
The
NOGI (New Orleans Grand Isle) Award is the oldest award in the
diving industry, dating back to the 1950s when it was initially
presented to world-class spearfishing champions. In the 1960s,
the award began to be presented to top achievers in the underwater
world by the Underwater Society of America. Each year it is
presented to distinguished divers, as selected by their AUAS
peers, in the categories of arts, science, sports/education
and distinguished service. Past winners of the NOGI Award include
diving luminaries Jacques Cousteau, Robert Ballard and Sylvia
Earle, as well as Scripps diving officer emeritus, James R.
Stewart.
“The 2004 NOGI
Award recipients are truly outstanding individuals of whom the
academy is very proud,” said AUAS President Hillary Viders.
“They uphold AUAS’s tradition of excellence.”
A
biological oceanographer in the Integrative Oceanography Division
at Scripps, Dayton’s research focuses on coastal and estuarine
habitats, including seafloor (benthic) and kelp communities,
as well as global fisheries. He studies California kelp communities,
Antarctic benthic communities and the impacts of overfishing
on marine ecosystems.
He has served as a
director for the Ocean Conservancy and the National Research
Council Panel on Marine Protected Areas. He received the 2004
E. O. Wilson Naturalist Award from the American Society of Naturalists
and was awarded a Scientific Diving Lifetime Achievement Award
from the American Academy of Underwater Sciences in 2002. He
is the only person ever to be awarded both the George Mercer
(1974) and William Cooper (2000) awards from the Ecological
Society of America. In 1990, he was appointed a member of the
U.S. Marine Mammal Commission by President George H. W. Bush.
Founded in 1993 by
NOGI honorees as an affiliate of the Underwater Society of America,
the Academy of Underwater Arts and Sciences is an international,
multidisciplinary, nonprofit organization dedicated to recognizing
the pioneers and leaders who have made a global impact on the
exploration, enjoyment, safety and preservation of the underwater
world and to passing the stewardship of the sea on to future
generations.
Media Contacts: Mario Aguilera or Cindy Clark
(858) 534-3624
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