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Dr. Charles Goldman
Professor of Limnology
Department of Environmental Science and Policy, UC Davis
Director, Tahoe Research Group, UC Davis
Education:
Ph.D., 1958, Limnology and Fisheries, University of Michigan
Research Interests:
Charles Goldman's fields of interest include global studies of
freshwater lakes with emphasis on biological, chemical and physical
interactions between the surrounding watersheds and lakes. Particular
emphasis has been on eutrophication of lakes, nutrient limiting factors, the
impact of climate and weather, and the use and importance of long term data
sets in environmental research utilizing nearly four decades of research on
Castle Lake and Lake Tahoe in California. The most recent overseas research
has been at Lake Baikal in Russia, where he has made eight expeditions. The
core research has been directed towards a better understanding of lake
processes and measures to preserve the water quality of lakes. He developed
the first courses in limnology and oceanography at UCD, served as Chair of
the Division of Environmental Studies from 1988-1992, and was founding
Director of the Institute of Ecology, serving from 1966-1969 and again in
1990-92. Prior to his 40-year tenure at UC Davis, he earned Bachelor
(Geology) and Masters (Zoology) degrees from the University of Illinois and
a Ph.D. in Limnology-Fisheries from the University of Michigan (1958). He
has supervised 90 graduate students and 32 postdoctorals during his 41 years
at UC Davis. Professor Goldman's many prestigious awards include an NSF
Senior Postdoctoral Fellowship in 1964 for limnological research in the
Arctic (Lapland), a Guggenheim Fellowship in northern Italy in 1965, the
"Goldman Glacier" in Antarctica named in 1967, served as President of the
American Society of Limnology and Oceanography in 1967-68, awarded the
Antarctic Service Medal by Congress in 1968, and elected a Fellow by the
California Academy of Sciences in 1969. In 1973-74, he was elected Vice
President of the Ecological Society of America, and accepted a Fulbright
Distinguished Professorship to Yugoslavia in 1985. He was awarded the
Vollenweider Lectureship in Canada in 1989, the Chevron Conservation Award
and Culver Man-of-the Year in 1991, the Earle A. Chiles Award in 1992, and
the UC Davis Distinguished Public Service & Research Lecturer awards in
1993. He was elected Vice President of the International Society of
Limnology (SIL) for 1992-98, and presented the prestigious Baldi Lecture at
the triennial SIL Congress in Ireland in August 1998. Dr. Goldman has
published four books and over 400 scientific articles, and has produced four
documentary films which are in worldwide distribution. He has served on
many national and international committees and is frequently sought for
consultation and research missions to foreign countries on major
environmental problems. In 1990 he was a member of a UNESCO team to qualify
Lake Baikal as an International Heritage Lake and Senior Scientist for the
National Geographic Baikal project. His single most important and sustained
contribution is the 40 years of research on Lake Tahoe and Castle Lake.
Professor Goldman is Director of the Tahoe Research Group and has pursued
long-term ecological research simultaneously at Lake Tahoe and Castle Lake,
California, since 1959. He successfully combined effective research and
social action with his pioneering studies of lake eutrophication. These
have been directly applied to engineering solutions, social needs, and legal
decisions. This work has recently included the development of artificial
wetlands and research on alternatives to conventional road salt for deicing
highways. This relationship of basic science to political change has been
of particular importance to the Lake Tahoe basin. During the summer of
1997, Dr. Goldman hosted President Clinton and Vice President Gore aboard
the UC Davis research vessel John Le Conte during the Lake Tahoe
Presidential Forum. Similar studies have extended Dr. Goldman's
research-social action efforts to analysis of lakes like Baikal in Russia
and hydroelectric impoundments throughout the world. Thus, while
aggressively pursuing basic research on lake dynamics, he has also been able
to translate the findings directly to state, national and international
policy decisions, contributing decisively to the conservation and judicious
use of aquatic resources from the Antarctic to the lakes and wetlands of
South and Central America, New Guinea, Africa, Asia, Europe and the United
States. Professor Goldman's career work has now been honored with his most
prestigious award yet: he received the 1998 Albert Einstein World Award of
Science in a formal ceremony last year in New Zealand. The Einstein Award,
bestowed annually to a single individual by a council of eminent scientists
which includes 25 Nobel laureates, recognizes those who have accomplished
scientific and technological achievements that have advanced scientific
understanding and benefited humanity.
Selected Publications:
Goldman, C.R., J.J. Elser, R.C. Richards, J.E. Reuter, J.C. Priscu
and A.L. Levin. 1996. Thermal stratification, nutrient dynamics, and
phytoplankton productivity during the onset of spring phytoplankton growth
in Lake Baikal, Russia. Hydrobiologia .
Goldman, C.R. 1993. The conservation of two large lakes: Tahoe and
Baikal.
Verh. Internat. Verein. Limnol. 25:388-391.
Goldman, C.R., A.D. Jassby and S.H. Hackley. 1993. Decadal,
interannual, and seasonal variability in enrichment bioassays at Lake Tahoe,
California-Nevada, USA. Can. J. Fish. Aquat. Sci. 50(7):1489-1496.
Goldman, C.R., A. Jassby and T. Powell. 1989. Interannual
fluctuations in primary production: Meteorological forcing at two subalpine
lakes. Limnol. Oceanogr. 34(2):310-323.
Goldman, C.R. 1988. Primary productivity, nutrients, and
transparency during the early onset of eutrophication in ultra-oligotrophic
Lake Tahoe, California-Nevada. Limnol. Oceanogr. 33(6, part 1):1321-1333.
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