Chicago Sun-Times

Swiss ornitholog­ist helped create World Wildlife Fund

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GENEVA — Dr. Luc Hoffmann, a Swiss ornitholog­ist and naturalist with a passion for wetlands who helped create the World Wildlife Fund for Nature and many other conservati­on groups, has died, wildlife groups said. He was 93.

Mr. Hoffmann died Thursday at his home in the Camargue wetlands of southeaste­rn France, which is known for flamingos and other birds, said the Tour de Valat, a research center he founded there over a half-century ago. No cause of death was given.

A grandson of the founder of the pharmaceut­ical company Hoffmann-La Roche, now Roche, Lukas “Luc” Hoffmann developed an early fascinatio­n with nature. He earned a doctorate in zoology from the University of Basel, where he was born on Jan. 23, 1923. He wrote over 60 books and publicatio­ns, mostly on birds and their habitats.

Mr. Hoffmann was cred- ited with a key role in early moves to protect the Coto Donana wetlands in southern Andalucia, Spain, and was a “driving force” behind the Ramsar Convention, an internatio­nal treaty on wetlands named for an Iranian city where it was adopted in 1971, WWF said.

Over the years, Mr. Hoffmann was honored in a number of countries, mostly European. In 2003, a Luc Hoffmann chair in field or- nithology was establishe­d at the Edward Grey Institute at Oxford University.

A private funeral was planned. Mr. Hoffmann is survived by four children, eight grandchild­ren and a great-grandchild, said the MAVA Foundation, another group that he helped found to fund global conservati­on.

MAVA and WWF set up the Luc Hoffmann Institute research center four years ago. AP

 ?? | KEYSTONE VIA AP ?? Luc Hoffmann was credited with a key role in early moves to protect the Coto Donana wetlands in southern Andalucia, Spain.
| KEYSTONE VIA AP Luc Hoffmann was credited with a key role in early moves to protect the Coto Donana wetlands in southern Andalucia, Spain.

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