The 2010 Indianapolis Prize Winner
To learn more about the work of Iain
Douglas-Hamilton and Save the Elephants,
click here.
Relentless in his lifelong devotion to the elephants’
survival, Save the
Elephants founder Iain Douglas-Hamilton, Ph.D., received
the 2010
Indianapolis Prize, the world’s leading award for animal
conservation. In recognition for his
lifetime achievements, Dr. Douglas-Hamilton received
$100,000 and the Lilly Medal at a
gala ceremony presented by Cummins Inc. on Sept. 25, 2010, at
The Westin Hotel in
Indianapolis. Photo from left to right, Mike Crowther,
Myrta Pulliam, Iain Douglas-Hamilton, Rob Smith, Alfre
Woodward.
Opening
remarks were given by Indianapolis Zoo president & CEO Michael
Crowther, Lilly Foundation president Rob Smith, Cummins chairman
& CEO Tim Solso, and 2008 Indianapolis Prize recipient Dr.
George Schaller. Prize chair Myrta Pulliam introduced the
hostess for the evening, award-winning actor Alfre Woodard, and
Rob Smith returned after the video presentations to award the
Lilly Medal itself to Dr. Iain Douglas-Hamilton, who was
dressed in his Scots finest, including kilt. Photo,
left to right, Iain Douglas-Hamilton, George Schaller.
Photos by Banayote Photography
The colorful career of Iain Douglas-Hamilton has included being
squashed by a rhino, targeted
by poachers, and poked by elephants’ tusks. He has suffered
malaria, hepatitis and other
diseases so exotic most people have never even heard of them –
not to mention the plane crashes
he has survived. He has persevered through severe droughts and a
flood so powerful it washed
away years of research. So why does he endure all this? One
reason – to save elephants.
Four decades ago, Douglas-Hamilton pioneered the first in-depth
scientific study of elephant
social behavior that has set the standard for every study to
follow. He led emergency anti-poaching
efforts in Uganda to bring the elephant population there from
the very brink of
extinction. He has testified before Congress on behalf of his
beloved elephants multiple times,
leading to the African elephant bill, to date the most
successful funding program for the species.
His pioneering Global Positioning System (GPS) elephant
tracking, widely emulated in Africa
and Asia, has become a model survey technique. He recently
partnered with Google Earth to
show elephant movement in real time via satellite images.
In September 2009, Douglas-Hamilton worked to rescue a rare herd
of desert elephants in
northern Kenya and Mali, threatened from one of the worst
droughts in nearly a dozen years. In
the spring of 2010, a devastating flood destroyed the Save the
Elephants camp in Kenya
including staff tents, computers and years of field research
notes. With a team of local
researchers, the camp is now being rebuilt.
He has patiently, relentlessly countered efforts to kill the
African elephant for ivory, while
continuing to educate others through his extensive conservation
research. Just recently, at the
Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES),
Douglas-Hamilton was
successful in campaigning against the Tanzanian and Zambian
proposals to downlist the
elephants’ status on the endangered list and sell their ivory
stockpiles.
“The plight of the African elephant is intensely personal to
Iain. He has studied, named and
nurtured thousands of African elephants for generations, and it
is this intimate understanding of
and love for these magnificent mammals that drives Iain’s
forceful efforts to secure a future for
endangered African elephants,” said Michael Crowther,
President/CEO, Indianapolis Zoo. “Iain
truly epitomizes what it means to be a hero.”
“Iain is a one-of-a-kind encyclopedia on elephants. His breadth
of knowledge, derived from
personal experience, observation, and interactions with
managers, politicians, and land owners,
is a critical and unique asset to conservation,” said George
Wittemyer, assistant professor
in Colorado State University's Department of Fish, Wildlife and
Conservation Biology, a protégé who has
worked with Douglas-Hamilton since 1997. “His legacy to the
conservation community, general public
and the African elephant includes alerting the world to the
risks of its overexploitation, original and
continued research on the behavior and ecology of the species,
identification of critical
populations/regions facing extreme threats, creation and
implementation of novel solutions to the
multitude of emerging conservation issues, and educating the
public about the wonders and intelligence of
the African elephant, its habitats, and the people with which it
coexists.”
Born in Dorset, England, Douglas-Hamilton attended Gordonstoun
School in Scotland and received his
bachelor’s degree and doctorate from the University of Oxford in
Oxford, England. He currently works
and resides in Nairobi, Kenya.
2006
Indianapolis Prize Winner, Dr. George Archibald
2008
Indianapolis Prize Winner, Dr. George Schaller