![]() His writing appears in The New York Times, TIME, The Guardian, Audubon, Yale e360, and National Geographic, and on the Web at Huffington Post, CNN.com, Medium, and elsewhere. He hosted the PBS series Saving the Ocean, which can be viewed free at PBS.org. ![]() Safina is now the first Endowed Professor for Nature and Humanity at Stony Brook University and is founding president of the not-for-profit Safina Center. He grew up raising pigeons, training hawks and owls, and spending as many days and nights in the woods and on the water as he could. His writing has won a MacArthur “genius” prize Pew, Guggenheim, and National Science Foundation Fellowships book awards from Lannan, Orion, and the National Academies and the John Burroughs, James Beard, and George Rabb medals. His work fuses scientific understanding, emotional connection, and a moral call to action. Carl Safina’s lyrical non-fiction writing explores how humans are changing the living world, and what the changes mean for non-human beings and for us all. ![]()
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