Judith Weis

Judith Shulman Weis (born May 29, 1941)[1] is an American marine biologist. Her research and writing focuses on the responses of salt marsh organisms to stresses, particularly heavy metal contaminants, invasive species and parasites. She is also working to reduce the spread of microplastics in the environment. Weis is professor emerita of marine biology at Rutgers University, where she taught for five decades.

Judith Weis working in a salt marsh

Early life and education

Weis was born and raised in New York City in a secular Jewish family.[1] She attended the Bronx High School of Science and earned her B.A. in 1962 from Cornell University, majoring in zoology. She received her M.S. in 1964 and Ph.D. in biology in 1967, both from New York University.[2]

Career

Weis had a summer internship in 1960, while in Cornell, at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Massachusetts. Immediately after receiving her Ph.D., Weis joined the faculty of Rutgers University in Newark, New Jersey, in 1967. In addition to teaching, she conducted research on the threats faced by organisms in shallow coastal estuary environments, such as contamination from pollution, especially heavy metals, and invasive species.[2] In the 1970s, Weis and her children starred in a Tang orange drink commercial because General Foods was promoting the product with ads featuring scientists with cute kids.[3] During a sabbatical in 1983–1984, she received a Congressional Science Fellowship from the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) where she worked for the Environment and Public Works Committee of the US Senate.[3] By publishing studies about how products such as pressure-treated wood used in bulkheads and pilings leach toxic metals into waterways, Weis has been able to influence laws and regulations that have led to manufacturers removing toxic metals from the products. Among the legislation that she has worked on were amendments to the Safe Drinking Water Act and Resource Conservation and Recovery Act.[3]

Weis later served on advisory committees for the US EPA, National Sea Grant College Program of the NOAA, and the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, where she still chairs the scientific advisory board.[3] She also served on the Waterfront Management Advisory Board of New York City and continues to serve on the National Marine Team of the Sierra Club and Plastic Free Waters Partnership.[2][3] Weis has served as president of the American Institute of Biological Sciences and volunteered with the Ecological Society of America, among other scientific bodies, and worked on the Intergovernmental Panel on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services and other United Nations (UN) reports. As of 2020, she is again coordinating the salt marsh chapter for the next iteration of the World Ocean Assessment for the UN.[3] Earlier in her career, she became interested in the women's movement after an argument with a sexist colleague at Rutgers[3] and soon became active with the National Organization for Women and has served on the board of the Association for Women in Science, among other activist organizations.[1]

As of 2020, Weiss is Professor Emerita of Biological Sciences at Rutgers[4][5] where she taught for over five decades.[6] She has published over 200 scientific papers and written several books about marine biology. She is married to Peddrick "Pete" Weis, also an academic, and the couple have two children and three grandchildren.[2]

Bibliography

  • Salt Marshes: A Natural and Unnatural History (2009; with Carol A. Butler)
  • Do Fish Sleep? (2011)
  • Walking Sideways: The Remarkable World of Crabs (2012)
  • Physiological, Developmental, and Behavioral Effects of Marine Pollution (2013)
  • Marine Pollution: What Everyone Needs to Know (2014)
  • Biological Invasions and Animal Behaviour (2016; co-edited with Daniel Sol)

Awards

  • Fellow of AAAS (elected 1985)
  • Governor's Science Advisory Committee, N.J., President's Council of Cornell Women, Marine Board of the National Research Council, 1991
  • Environmental Award from Accabonac Protection Committee, 1996
  • Rutgers Class of 1962 Presidential Public Service Award, 2003–2004
  • Fulbright Senior Specialist – Indonesia (Hasanuddin University, Makassar, South Sulawesi) May 2006
  • Merit Award from the Society of Wetland Scientists 2016
gollark: Which is probably a significant improvement for anyone but sunfish or, well, prize owners.
gollark: Yes, in about... eight months now?
gollark: (2Gs)
gollark: I don't understand *why* they're so valuable, though, to be honest.
gollark: You might get an offer in a while. You might not. Prize valuation is weird.

References

  1. Dr. Judith S. Weis, Interview by Veteran Feminists of America, July 2018
  2. Swiatkowski, Paula. "Working for a Sea Change", Sierra Club, May 6, 2019
  3. Verdier, James. "In Their Own Words: Judith Weis", BioScience, Vol. 70, Issue 6, June 2020, pp. 461–467, Oxford University Press (subscription required)
  4. "Judith Weis", The Conversation, Retrieved July 6, 2020
  5. "Judith S. Weis", Rutgers University. Retrieved July 6, 2020
  6. "Women of Science", Rutgers University, accessed May 19, 2019
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