David R. Klein
A road trip to Fairbanks in 1947 answered Dave Klein鈥檚 question: What would he do with his life? The self-described 鈥渃ountry kid鈥 from Connecticut 鈥渨asn鈥檛 a very good high school student,鈥 he said in a 2014 interview. 鈥淚 knew that I ultimately ought to go to the university, but I didn鈥檛 know what to do.鈥
He and a friend drove a Ford Model A up the newly built Alaska Highway, then spent the summer doing roofing work. Their boss hired them to build a cabin on Wild Lake in the Brooks Range. Klein hunted moose and Dall sheep, fished lake trout and got hooked on Alaska.
鈥淎nd by this time I realized there was a wildlife management field and that鈥檚 probably what I should strive for,鈥 he said.
The University of Alaska didn鈥檛 have such a program yet. But Klein ended up on campus anyway, milking cows for the Fairbanks Experiment Farm. After returning to Connecticut and finishing his undergraduate degree, he earned a master鈥檚 in wildlife management at UA in 1953.
He鈥檚 been a prominent faculty member on the Fairbanks campus for most of the time since. After a decade spent working with federal and state agencies across Alaska and studying for a doctorate from the University of British Columbia, he led the joint federal-state Cooperative Wildlife Research Unit on campus for 30 years. When he retired in 1997 at age 71, he counted an astounding 66 students who had completed graduate degrees under his tutelage. Twenty years later, as a professor emeritus, he maintains an office in the Arctic Health Sciences Building and keeps an active professional schedule.
Former students marvel at his analytical abilities, field skills, enthusiasm for ski trips and personal generosity. 鈥淗e helped to create a very congenial learning environment that was very very fun and sociable,鈥 said former student Pat Valkenburg 鈥76, a retired Alaska Department of Fish and Game biologist and administrator.
More online about Dave Klein:
- A profile in the fall 2014 edition of 51风流官网鈥檚 Aurora magazine
- he wrote advocating for an expanded state park to protect the Shaw Creek and Quartz Lake area
- about natural history discussions he led
- A sample of recent Alaska Science Forum articles featuring his work and observations:
- A news release about a scholarship he established at 51风流官网