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  1. Aldo Starker Leopold (October 22, 1913 – August 23, 1983) was an American author, forester, zoologist and conservationist. Leopold served as a professor at the University of California, Berkeley, for thirty years within the Zoology, Conservation, and Forestry departments. Throughout his life, Leopold was a public face for science.

  2. A. Starker Leopold. 1913-1983. by Mary Meagher. A. Starker Leopold began his long advisory association with the National Park Service in 1962 with his appointment to the Special Advisory Board on Wildlife Management by Secretary of the Interior Stewart Udall. His involvement with the national parks terminated only with his death on August 23, 1983.

  3. Starker Leopold | Biodiversidad Mexicana. 1913 - 1983. Desde muy pequeño tuve la oportunidad de visitar el norte de México acompañando a mi papá al río Gavilán en Sonora y Chihuahua. En 1944 tuve el trabajo de mi vida. Me contrató la Unión Panamericana para hacer un estudio de la fauna silvestre de México y así continué por 8 años.

  4. A. STARKER Leopold, conservationist, natu- ralist, wildlife biologist, and educator, died of a heart attack at his Berkeley, California, home on 23 August 1983. He was born in Burlington, Iowa, on 22 October 1913, to Aldo Leopold and. Estella Bergere Leopold. His outstanding.

  5. A. Starker Leopold, one of the most influential figures in ecology and environmental policy, died. suddenly at his Berkeley, California home on 23 August 1983 at age 69. He is survived by his. immediate family?his wife Elizabeth, a son, Fredrick Starker Leopold, a daughter, Sarah Leopold Klock, and three grandchildren.

  6. ALDO STARKER LEOPOLD 241 existing refuges, and detailed long-range and multiple-use planning. Perhaps the most significant recommendation was that: "National wildlife refuges should be extensively used for research and teaching by qualified scientists and naturalists.

  7. A. Starker Leopold, Ph.D., (b. 1913, d. 1983) served on the faculty of UC Berkeley from 1946 to 1978, ultimately as Professor of Zoology and Forestry. In 1963, Dr. Leopold and colleagues published Wildlife Management in the National Parks, a key report that established goals for natural resource management that guided the parks for decades.