Join an international wildlife biologist, author, and leading Blakiston’s Fish Owl expert for a program about efforts to protect this secretive owl in the forbidding reaches of eastern Russia.
The Blakiston’s Fish Owl, the largest species of owl on earth, found only in the far northern regions of Russia, Japan, and Korea, is also perhaps the most mysterious. Only a handful of scientists have attempted to study them, but a chance sighting changed the course of Jonathan Slaght’s life–sending him on a five-year journey to study these enigmatic creatures.

In Owls of the Eastern Ice: A Quest to Find and Save the World’s Largest Owl, American field scientist and conservationist Slaght takes us to the Primoriye region of Eastern Russia, where we join a small team for late-night monitoring missions and mad dashes across thawing rivers, drink vodka with mystics, hermits, and scientists, and listen to fireside tales of Amur tigers. Most captivating of all are the fish owls themselves: vicious hunters, devoted parents, singers of eerie duets, and irrepressible survivors in a harsh and shrinking habitat.

A rare glimpse into the everyday life of a scientist and the subjects of his deep fascination, Owls of the Eastern Ice is a testament to the determination, creativity, and resolve required by field research and a powerful reminder of the beauty, strength, and vulnerability of the natural world.

What to expect: Share in the amazing Blakison’s fish owl through the stories of author Jonathan Slaght’s field research and current work with Wildlife Conservation Society’s Russia Program.


This program is being offered at a reduced rate to Chesapeake Forum through Pickering Creek Audubon Center.

Webinar course provided by Pickering Creek (No recording)
Thursday | Feb 16 | 7 – 8:30 pm | $7

Slaght

Jonathan Slaght, Ph.D.

Jonathan C. Slaght, Ph.D. is the Russia & Northeast Asia Coordinator for the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS). He manages research projects involving endangered species such as Blakiston’s fish owls and Amur tigers, and coordinates WCS avian conservation activities along the East Asia-Australasian Flyway from the Arctic to the Tropics. He received a B.A. from Drew University, and M.S. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Minnesota. He is considered one of the world's foremost experts on Blakiston's fish owl. Slaght’s writings, scientific research, and photographs have been featured by the BBC World Service, the New York Times, The Guardian, Smithsonian Magazine, The New Yorker, and Audubon Magazine, among others. He is the translator of Vladimir Arsenyev’s 1921 natural history classic, Across the Ussuri Kray (Indiana University Press, 2016). He authors a blog for Scientific American about his fieldwork titled “East of Siberia.”

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