东精影业

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Joanna Wu

Conservation biologist Joanna Wu, an alumna of the , is shining a bright spotlight on the study of North American songbirds. In her current research as a doctoral student at the University of California, Los Angeles, she is analyzing the survival rates of songbirds to better understand why male birds tend to have a longer lifespan than female birds.

“I went back to school because I was really compelled by this question of, ‘What’s the deal with female birds? What else do we not know,’” Wu said.

Now she’s making her own flight path into the study of female wild birds and their importance to conservation work.

Passion path

Wu with bird on her hand
Joanna Wu does field research during her graduate studies at 东精影业 Hilo 2010–2012. (Courtesy photo)

Her passion for birds began during fieldwork at UC Berkeley. She later chose 东精影业 Hilo for her master’s degree in the , drawn by 贬补飞补颈ʻ颈’蝉 native birds.

At 东精影业 Hilo, she studied the ʻōmaʻo, a native thrush essential for spreading seeds and supporting forest health.

“There’s a unique problem with Hawaiʻi, of course, with avian conservation,” said Wu. “So I felt like it would be a good place to go and learn about that, and I’m really glad I did.”

‘I learned to be a scientist’

Hawaiʻi biologist, Professor Patrick Hart, founder of 东精影业 贬颈濒辞’蝉 , commonly called LOHE Lab, was among her thesis advisors.

bird
The ʻōmaʻo (Myadestes obscurus), also called the Hawaiian thrush, is an endemic species of a robin-like bird found only on Hawaiʻi Island. (Credit: Alan Schmierer)

During her time at 东精影业 Hilo, she tracked ʻōmaʻo movements in comparison to the warbling white-eye, a non-native bird sometimes studied to understand its role in local ecosystems, especially its potential impact on native bird species.

Wu said the university was an important part of her journey, a “great foundation” for her current work and personal development. “I certainly found adequate support academically; I learned to be a scientist there.”

Wu’s research continues to focus on bird conservation. She has helped launch , an initiative promoting awareness of female birds.

—By Sophia Kim-O’Sullivan

Wu with bird on her hand
Joanna Wu conducts field research.
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