6/21我們邀請來自國立自然科學博物館的黃文山館長擔任嘉賓:
研究領域
台灣真的是蕞爾小島。兩棲爬蟲種類很少,最多不超過 150 種。雖然如此,國立自然科學博物館的某些兩棲爬蟲標本還是未達到一定數量,至少也要達到作研究或足以交換的數量。在過去約27年(1992-2019),我的主要工作乃在於兩棲爬蟲標本的蒐藏及研究。
尤其是蛇類。 雖然我們得到捐贈的蛇超過 2300 條,但因有的標本失去了原始資料,因此價值喪失不少。雖然如此,大部份標本仍彌足珍貴,為我們標本蒐藏增色甚多。除了守宮科外(尤其是蘭嶼產的守宮),蜥蝪的量尚可。例如已經被研究過的雪山草蜥、短肢攀蜥和台灣蜓蜥等。烏龜也是往後要加強蒐藏的重點之一。尤其是分佈在台灣附近的四種海龜,綠蠵龜、玳瑁、赤蠵龜和欖蠵龜等。
1992-1996年之間我的研究大致圍繞著中部高山溫帶區五種蜥蝪。1997年後將重心移往離島熱帶區的蘭嶼島。至今(2025年)已經研究當地的爬蟲類生態約有28年之久;發表的學術論文超過70篇,幾乎都是第一作者或通訊作者。尤其發表在PNAS (二篇)和Science Advances (二篇)都是長期生態資料的蒐集所得。
2019-2025(March)擔任學術副館長,主要負責本館學術、展示、科教和生態園區的行政工作。2025-迄今擔任館長一職,行政工作更為加重。尤其向教育部爭取到生命科學廳的更新計畫,爾後的日子將會多采多姿,努力不懈。
6/22我們邀請來自澳洲的Thom van Dooren教授擔任嘉賓:
About
I’m Professor of Environmental Humanities and Deputy Director of the Sydney Environment Institute at the University of Sydney, Australia. From 2024, I am also a Humboldt Research Award funded Fellow at the Multidisciplinary Environmental Studies in the Humanities (MESH) research hub at the University of Cologne. I am a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities and Co-Director of the Oceania Observatory of the Humanities for the Environment initiative (with Sophie Chao and Craig Santos Perez), and Co-Convenor of the Australian Environmental Humanities Hub (with Libby Robin).
My research and writing explore diverse ways of understanding and caring for the dead and dying—humans and nonhumans; individuals, collectives, and kinds—and the significance of these practices, historical and contemporary, for shaping ecological possibilities. This research is situated in the interdisciplinary environmental humanities and brings science and technology studies, philosophy, history, anthropology, and cultural studies into conversation with the natural sciences and ethnographic work with relevant communities.
One core focus of my work over the past decade has been the many philosophical, ethical, cultural, and political issues that arise in the context of species extinctions and human entanglements with threatened species and places. With Deborah Bird Rose, Matthew Chrulew, and colleagues, I founded and developed the multidisciplinary field of extinction studies to explore these themes. I have done so in three books: Flight Ways: Life and Loss at the Edge of Extinction (Columbia University Press, 2014), The Wake of Crows: Living and Dying in Shared Worlds (Columbia University Press, 2019), and A World in a Shell: Snail Stories for a Time of Extinctions (MIT Press, 2022). These books have been translated into French, Japanese, Italian, and Chinese (with other translations in process) and have won or been shortlisted for a range of scholarly and popular prizes including the Ludwik Fleck Prize of the Society for Social Studies of Science, the Gold Nautilus Book Award, and the Prime Minister’s Literary Award (non-fiction, shortlisted).
My research has also placed a strong emphasis on public engagement and participation, producing a range of outputs in collaboration with and/or addressed to wider audiences (further information here). This work includes a trade book, numerous popular essays, programs of public events, and a range of different digital projects from an audio documentary and a museum trail to community storytelling archives.
I was the founding co-editor of the international, open-access journal Environmental Humanities (Duke University Press). I founded this journal with the late Deborah Bird Rose in 2012 as the first space dedicated explicitly to this emerging field. In 2016, Deborah retired and I co-edited the journal with Elizabeth DeLoughrey. In 2020 we handed it over to new editors and it continues to thrive.
My research has been funded by competitive grants from the Australian Research Council (FT160100098; DP240102689; DP220101258; DP150103232; DP110102886), the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation (Germany), the British Academy, and other funding bodies. In 2023, I received a Humboldt Research Award for my career contributions to date. From 2021-2023 I was a member of the Australian Research Council College of Experts.
I have held a variety of fellowships and visiting positions. From 2017-2021, I held an Australian Research Council Future Fellowship (FT160100098) at the University of Sydney, and from 2014-2016, I was a Humboldt Research Fellow (Experienced Researchers) at the Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich. I have also held appointments as a Professor II in the Oslo School of Environmental Humanities at the University of Oslo (2020-2022, 0.1FTE), and as a SOAR Prize Fellow at the University of Sydney (2022-2023). I have been a visiting scholar at the University of California at Santa Cruz (2005, 2010), the Environmental Humanities Laboratory at the Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden (2014), the Department of Anthropology at MIT (2018), and the Centre for Pacific Islands Studies at the University of Hawai`i at Mānoa (2018).
I completed my BA (honours) in philosophy and religious studies at the Australian National University (2003), and my PhD in the Fenner School of Environment and Society, also at the ANU (2007). I then held postdoctoral positions in the Department of Geography at the University of Hull in the UK (2008) and in the Transforming Cultures research group at the University of Technology, Sydney (2009-2010). From 2011-2017 I helped to establish and then worked with the Environmental Humanities group at the University of New South Wales, where we set up Australia’s (and one of the world’s) first undergraduate qualifications in the Environmental Humanities and the world’s first MOOC in this emerging area. I moved to the University of Sydney in 2018.