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For Immediate Release:
Contact: Cathy Carroll, communications and promotions manager, 541.382.4754 ext. 300; ccarroll@highdesertmuseum.org
High Desert Museum, 59800 S. Hwy. 97, Bend, Ore. 97702 www.highdesertmuseum.org
CAPTION for attached photo: James Dawson, an internationally recognized expert on raptors, with Marie the Harris’s Hawk , at the High Desert Museum, where Dawson is the new curator of wildlife. Photo and Video Credit: Lee Schaefer/High Desert Museum
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 Internationally Recognized Expert in Raptors Joins High Desert Museum
 Award-winning raptor researcher and filmmaker James Dawson expanding Museum’s live animal programs.
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james dawson

Bend, Ore. – James Dawson, an internationally recognized expert on raptors, has joined the High Desert Museum as curator of living collections. For more than 30 years, Dawson has worked for wildlife conservation, and as a raptor biologist, he has specialized in research on eagles, hawks, falcons and owls. His has done field research in every desert and with nearly every species of raptor in North America. Outside of the United States, he led the first field project to investigate the endangered St. Lucia parrot on the island of St. Lucia in the Lesser Antilles. Last year, he established bird survey routes in the Tropical Deciduous Forest in Mexico. His research specialty has been the social behavior of the Harris’s Hawk, and he is considered an authority on this beautiful dark hawk that hunts throughout the Sonora Desert.

During his career, Dawson has written scientific papers, book chapters, and magazine articles. In 1995, he wrote and co-produced the documentary “Wolves of the Air,” a film about Harris’s Hawks produced by the National Geographic Society, which airs regularly on the National Geographic Channel. The film won an Emmy Award, and also garnered the Animal Behavior Society’s Best Film Award.  Dawson’s approach to conservation is based on centered solutions that address the needs of all stakeholders, and seek solutions to human-wildlife conflict. He has worked with such diverse groups as the Department of Energy, Westinghouse Electric, mines and prisons. He recently has partnered with utility and power companies in Arizona to prevent accidental electrocutions of birds that perch on power poles. Working with power companies, he organized a series of workshops to help them create and launch avian protection programs. “Education is the key to understanding the world we live in, and scientists have an obligation to bring science to the public,” said Dawson. “I also feel strongly that people must make both intellectual and emotional connections with the natural world to understand and appreciate it.”To help the public better understand raptors and birds of prey, Dawson developed a unique approach to demonstrating live birds flying free in natural habitats. This program model emphasized the inherent beauty and majesty of wildlife, and minimized the theatrics of most zoo bird shows. His exploratory effort with this concept, the Raptor Free Flight Program, has been the premier animal program at the prestigious Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum near Tucson, Arizona, for more than a decade.  
At the High Desert Museum, Dawson has begun incorporating the Raptor Free Flight Program into two daily Desert Dwellers shows that feature live animals throughout the summer. During most of the shows, the Harris’s hawk swoops over the heads of visitors. A red-tailed hawk and barn owl also fly in the show that includes visits from badgers, porcupines and reptiles. “Throughout time, wildlife and people have always been inextricably linked, a relationship that remains just as important today,” he said. “Museum programs offer a unique opportunity to reconnect with the natural world, the historic past, and the future. It’s exciting to build new programs that will bring people eye to eye with the wild creatures that have shaped our history so strongly.” Vice President of Programs Dana Whitelaw said, “The Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum inspired Donald Kerr in his creation of the High Desert Museum. It is an incredible connection for us now to have James Dawson as our curator of living collections. His experience and perspective deepens the quality of our educational programs that touch so many school children and lifelong learners who visit here every day.”

About the Museum
The High Desert Museum is nationally acclaimed for inspiring stewardship of the natural and cultural resources of the High Desert. It offers close-up wildlife encounters, living history performances, Native American and Western art, music, nature trails, tours and classes for all ages. It is on 135 forested acres, five minutes from Bend on South Highway 97.
The Museum is open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily and admission rates are: adults, $15; seniors (65 plus), $12; ages 5-12, $9; age 4 and younger, free.