Anne Elizabeth MagurranCBEFRSE (born 1955) is a British Professor of ecology at
University of St Andrews in
Scotland.[1] She is the author of several books[1][2][3][4] on measuring
biological diversity, and the importance for quantifying biodiversity for conservation. She has won numerous awards and honors, is regularly consulted for global assessments and analyses of biodiversity and conservation[2] and her research is often highlighted by journalists.[5][6]
Magurran has worked with
Robert May and other leading biologists, including
Helder Queiroz, whom she advised. Her research projects often focus are on tropical freshwater fish communities - specifically the Trinidadian guppy- in the Neotropics and India.[7]
Research and career
Magurran completed her PhD at the University of Ulster on the biological diversity of native woodlands in Ireland.[8] She then went on to complete postdoctoral work at
Bangor University and the
University of Oxford. Throughout her career she has used fish communities to study biodiversity, the evolution of
biodiversity, and on the role of predation in the evolution of social behaviour. She is now a professor at the
University of St Andrews, where she is the university's most cited female scientist.[9] Globally, she is the second most cited female ecologist [10] and evolutionary biologist.[11] She is an international counselor and advisor on issues of conservation related to biodiversity and engaged in the UN
Convention on Biological Diversity[12] and in the
World Economic Forum in 2018.[2][13]