Margaret
Hawkins
Margaret Hawkins has been involved in the work of
Taronga Conservation Society of Australia at Sydney’s Taronga Zoo for more than
thirty years, initially as a volunteer. Observation requests from staff lead her
to form the Taronga Animal Watch program. This program has expanded to play an
important operational and research role and has now become the Behavioural
Studies Unit, a section of the Scientific Research and Wildlife Conservation
Department. Margaret became a member of zoo staff and remains the TCSA’s
Behavioural Biologist. Highlights of her zoo career have been her involvement
in the introduction of rescued chimpanzees to Ngamba Island Sanctuary in Uganda
and the monitoring of the first successful breeding of platypus at the zoo.
In the mid-nineties, Margaret became involved in
environmental enrichment in the zoo and this quickly became one of her
passions, especially after attending 3rd International Conference on
Environmental Enrichment (ICEE) in Florida USA in 1997 (and every ICEE since).
Taronga hosted to the 5th ICEE in 2001 and Margaret has served on
the ICEE Committee ever since. She has now taken on the position of secretary
for The Shape of Enrichment Inc.
As well as facilitating enrichment at Taronga Zoo,
she promotes enrichment in the region by regularly running enrichment workshops
at the Australasian Society of Zoo Keeping annual conferences, presenting
enrichment talks and workshops at Regional and International zoo and scientific
conferences, and compiling and co-editing the Environmental Enrichment Handbook
for Australian Animals. She has been involved in keeper training and is the
coordinator of a captive vertebrate behaviour course at Charles Sturt
University.