Louisville
Zoo sends St. X teen to Canada to study polar bears
Saint Xavier High School junior Sam
Leist, 16, will soon join 15 other high school students from
around the world as he travels to Churchill, Manitoba, Canada,
to study polar bears during their fall migration and collect
field data with scientists.
The Louisville Zoo recently selected
Leist to be the Zoo’s ambassador during Polar Bear
International’s week-long Polar Bear Leadership Camp. The camp,
which was founded in 2004, includes intense field work that
exposes students to all sides of the issues facing polar bears
and humans in the Churchill region.
Leist, who has been a teen volunteer at
the Zoo since 2006 and an active Zoo Youth Board member, said he
has always been interested in the conservation of wildlife.
“Last year, I created a presentation at
my high school about polar bears and their natural habitat,”
Leist said. “During this project I learned of their tragic
situation. It is an act of injustice that this species, along
with many of Earth’s other wonders, are dying out so rapidly. I
believe that any attempt to help inform the general public of
this situation should be endorsed.”
Leist, who leaves for Churchill October
2 and returns October 9, said he is excited about this
experience of a lifetime.
“I have participated in many outdoor
expeditions, and this trip is particularly exciting to me
because it reflects the idea of conservation,” Leist said. “I am
thrilled to go on this expedition not only because I will be
educating myself and others about the environment, but I am
going to be having a blast doing it!”
Leist is on the honor roll and
principal’s list at Saint Xavier, has been awarded many awards
including the Saint Xavier Freshmen Mock Trial Award (2007) and
the Louisville Zoo Youth Award (2008). He was also elected into
the Order of the Arrow, a Boy Scout Honor Program, in 2006. He
likes spending his free time camping, backpacking and sailing.
Once Leist returns home from the Polar
Bear Leadership Camp, he will create a forward action plan to
help educate his peers and the Louisville community about
conservation issues.
“I intend to spread the word of my
experiences in environmental conservation as far and wide as
possible when I return from Canada,” he said, “and hopefully I
will be able to educate others in how they can participate in
rescuing our environment.”
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This is the second year the Louisville
Zoo has sent a teen to Canada to study polar bears during their
fall migration and collect field data with scientists. Last year
Emily Goldstein from Atherton High School served as the Zoo’s
ambassador during Polar Bear International’s week-long Polar
Bear Leadership Camp. For more information on Polar Bear
International’s week-long Polar Bear Leadership Camp, visit
www.polarbearsinternational.org.
-- MEDIA OPPORTUNITY --
If you would like to interview Sam
Leist before he heads to Canada, contact Louisville Zoo Public
Relations Manager Kara Bussabarger at 502-238-5331.
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The Louisville Zoo, a non-profit
organization and state zoo of Kentucky, is dedicated to
bettering the bond between people and our planet by providing
excellent care for animals, a great experience for visitors, and
leadership in scientific research and conservation education.
The Zoo is accredited by the American Association of Museums (AAM)
and by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA).
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