FWC biologist/Get Outdoors Florida! chairman named Conservation Educator of the Year
News Release
Thursday, July 01, 2010
Media contact: Tom Champeau (FWC), 850-488-0331; Preston Robertson (Florida Wildlife Federation), 850-656-7113
Bob Wattendorf, a fisheries biologist with the
Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC), recently
received the "Conservation Educator of the Year" award from the
Florida Wildlife Federation.
In 2008, Wattendorf initiated an effort to bring
together a statewide coalition of agencies, universities and
businesses to encourage families and children to participate in
nature-based recreation. The collaborative effort resulted in
formation of Get Outdoors Florida! (www.GetOutdoorsFlorida.org), a coalition of
more than 100 active partners, including major state and federal
agencies and diverse groups interested in offsetting the problems
associated with "nature-deficit disorder," a term coined by Richard
Louv in his book "Last Child in the Woods."
Florida Gov. Charlie Crist and his Cabinet
recognized the Get Outdoors Florida! Coalition in 2009, when they
signed a resolution recognizing the Children's Outdoor Bill of
Rights for Florida. The coalition, integrated into the
Children and Nature Network, is working to extend the reach of such
programs as President Barack Obama's America's Great Outdoors
initiative (www.doi.gov/americasgreatoutdoors), and first
lady Michelle Obama's Let's Move Outside (www.LetsMove.gov) program to combat
obesity.
"Conservation education today is all about
integrating efforts to introduce newcomers to the beauty and value
of an active, nature-based lifestyle," Wattendorf said.
Researchers have documented the health, education
and societal problems associated with too much time spent indoors
and dealing with electronic media. Research now shows that
embracing a lifestyle change - spending more time outdoors in
nature, whether, fishing, birding, paddling, gardening or just
hiking in the woods - leads to a happier, healthier and smarter
population (www.childrenandnature.org).
During his 31-year career with the FWC, Wattendorf
has served to promote Florida as the Fishing Capital of the World,
worked with the Recreational Boating and Fishing Foundation to
bring about best practices for "Boating, Fishing and Aquatic
Resources Stewardship Education" and helped craft the "Federal Aid
Supplement for Aquatic Education Programs."
The Florida Wildlife Federation is a nonprofit
conservation education organization composed of thousands of
concerned Floridians and people from all walks of life who have a
common interest in preserving, managing and improving Florida's
fish, wildlife, soil, water and plant life. As the state affiliate
of the National
Wildlife Federation, it has been helping Florida's wildlife
since 1937.
In presenting the award on behalf of the
Federation, Preston Robertson, vice president for conservation,
praised Wattendorf "for his tremendous efforts on behalf of
conservation and the need to get Floridians outside and into the
natural world."