Maria Koepcke

Maria Koepcke
Born (1924-05-15)15 May 1924
Germany
Died 24 December 1971(1971-12-24) (aged 47)
Amazon Rainforest, Peru
Nationality German
Fields ornithology

Maria Koepcke (or Köpcke) (1924-1971), was a German-born ornithologist who worked in Peru as the head of the bird and mammal department of the Natural History Museum in Lima

Koepcke, originally Maria Emilie Anna von Mikulicz-Radecki, was born and educated in Germany, earning a PhD in Zoology from Kiel University in 1949. She then moved to Peru, where she married zoologist Hans-Wilhelm Koepcke in 1950. Together they collaborated on much of their scientific work and publications, and had a daughter named Juliane who also became an ornithologist. Maria Koepcke was a successful Neotropical ornithologist at a time when South American ornithology was largely male-dominated (although there were others like Emilie Snethlage).

Death

On Christmas Eve 1971, Koepcke traveled with her 17-year-old daughter on LANSA Flight 508 from Lima to Pucallpa to join her husband for a holiday. The plane encountered a severe thunderstorm, was hit by lightning, and disintegrated above the Amazon Rainforest. Seated next to each other, the Koepkes were separated in mid-air (with Juliane remaining belted to their row of three seats), and both survived the fall. Coming to rest in different areas of the jungle floor, Maria was badly injured and died several days later as did all the rest of the 92 passengers other than Juliane. Juliane survived despite sustaining a broken collar bone and an injury in the right eye. After eleven days traveling through the jungle, Juliane managed to reach a shelter that belonged to lumbermen, and was rescued on 3 January 1972.

Maria Koepcke was a member of the Deutsche Ornithologen-Gesellschaft from 1951 and a corresponding member from 7 October 1971.[1]

Juliane returned to Germany in March 1972, where she fully recovered from her injuries, continued her studies, and became a PhD zoologist like her parents. Juliane returned to Panguana, the nature reserve founded by her parents, to study butterflies for her dissertation, and again to study the behavior of bats for her PhD. Juliane continues to return to Peru often, accompanied by her husband, where together they continue the conservation legacy of her parents.

Koepcke is commemorated in the names of:

References

  1. Niethammer, G. (1974). "Maria Koepke geb. Mikulicz-Radecki". J. Ornithol. (in German). 115: 91–102.
  2. Corvacho, Melvin Gastañaga; MacLeod, Ross; Brooks, Daniel M.; Hennessey, Bennett (2011). "Distinctive morphology, ecology, and first vocal descriptions of Sira Curassow (Pauxi [Unicornis] koepckeae): evidence for species rank" (PDF). Ornitologia Neotropical. 22: 267–279.
  3. Beolens B, Watkins M, Grayson M. 2011. The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. ISBN 978-1-4214-0135-5. ("Koepcke", p. 144).

Journals

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