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DDWS awards $29K for environmental studies scholarships

By REFUGE/DDWS 5 min read
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REFUGE/DDWS Dr. H. Randall Deming Endowed Scholarship for Conservation & Environmental Studies recipient Ella Guedouar with wooly monkeys at a rescue center on the Amazon River in Peru.

This summer, the “Ding” Darling Wildlife Society-Friends of the Refuge awarded $29,200 in conservation education scholarships to 13 students from the five-county area. Over its 18 years, the DDWS Environmental Scholarship Program has awarded a total of $262,400 to students.

“The society is committed to educating today’s youth to become future conservation stewards,” DDWS Education Committee Chair Nancy Felker said. “We partner with businesses, families and individuals to provide annual scholarships to award to outstanding students pursuing degrees related to conservation, wildlife biology, environmental engineering, policy and science.”

Of the 13 scholarships, three are permanently endowed. Individuals passionate about helping students make a difference in all areas of conservation donate the other scholarships on an annual basis.

The Richard Bailey Scholarship, named in memory of a longtime refuge volunteer and donated by his family, went to Stanley Carter Oleckna, a graduate of Imagine High School in North Port. He is pursuing a major in biology, with minors in chemistry and climate change, at Florida Gulf Coast University in Fort Myers.

The Mike & Terry Baldwin Scholarship, named for DDWS’ past president and his wife, an emeritus board member, went to Chase Qurollo, a Cape Coral High School alumnus who is heading to the University of Central Florida in Orlando to study environmental engineering.

Robert Marlin Smith, a North Fort Myers High School and FGCU graduate entering his first year of FGCU’s environmental science master’s program, received the Dr. Andrew and Laura Dahlem Scholarship. The Dahlems live part-time on Sanibel; their family honors them with a named scholarship.

Ella Guedouar, an Estero High School and FGCU alumnus entering the University of South Florida’s integrative biology Ph.D. program, received the Dr. H. Randall Deming Endowed Scholarship for Conservation & Environmental Studies. Deming’s family established the scholarship in 2016 as a permanently endowed scholarship in his memory.

Liliana Salazar-Juarez graduated from Immokalee High School and will represent the first generation in her family to attend college. She will study wildlife biology at Florida State University in Tallahassee and received the “Ding” Darling Conservation Scholarship, made possible by an anonymous donor.

Two Leslie & Hans Fleischner Scholarships went to: Chloe Lowman, a Cypress Lake High School (Fort Myers) graduate intending to study environmental science and law at UCF; and Fort Myers High School graduate Elise Brown, who plans to double-major in environmental engineering and music at the University of Florida in Gainesville. The Fleischners were part-time Sanibel residents whose love of the island’s environment has inspired them to sponsor the scholarships for several years.

Tori Guarino, an alumnus of Golden Gate High School in Naples and now attendee at FGCU majoring in biology, with minors in environmental education and chemistry, received the Mary Elaine Jacobson Memorial Scholarship, made possible by the Sanibel-Captiva Audubon Society.

Established as a permanently endowed scholarship by the estate of a longtime DDWS board and Education Committee member and her husband, the Win and Marilyn Kloosterman Memorial Scholarship went to Blade Kalikow, a Community High School of Naples alumnus. He studies environmental engineering at Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts.

Emelia Valentz, a graduate of Port Charlotte High School who will attend USF to double-major in pre-architecture and computer science, received the Barry & Francine Litofsky Scholarship, in memory of two former refuge volunteers made possible by their children.

The Tarpon Bay Explorers Scholarship went to Mark Leone, who graduated from Estero High School and is attending Stanford University in California, where he is pursuing a degree in engineering for extreme environments. TBE, the “Ding” Darling National Wildlife Refuge’s recreation concession, started the original DDWS scholarship program in 2006.

Three Jane Werner Endowed Environmental Scholarships, established in 2011 as the DDWS’ first permanently endowed scholarship fund, went to: Dara Craig, a Cypress Lake High School and Vanderbilt University (Nashville, Tennessee) alumnus earning her doctorate at the University of Oregon in environmental science, studies and policy; and Mallory Poff, an alumnus of Barron Collier High School (Naples) and Elon University in North Carolina who is starting work on her master’s degree in mechanical engineering and materials science at Duke University in North Carolina. The late Jane Werner, who volunteered at the refuge for 25 years, established the fund prior to her death.

“These students become part of the greater ‘Ding’ Darling family. It is wonderful to see what they are accomplishing through their studies and their enthusiasm for making a real difference in conservation,” Felker said. “We welcome them back as scholarship applicants next year and as fellow conservation stewards in years to come.”

The DDWS will award scholarships starting at $1,000 each at the end of the 2023-24 school year. High school seniors and college students from Lee, Collier, Charlotte, Glades and Hendry counties who are pursuing careers in biology, conservation and environmental studies are eligible.

For an application and to read full descriptions of the scholarship winners and donors, visit dingdarlingsociety.org/articles/student-scholarships. Those interested in establishing a named scholarship can contact DDWS Executive Director Birgie Miller Gresham at 239-292-0566.

To reach REFUGE/DDWS, please email