The Daily Courier

Pioneering giraffe expert Anne Innis Dagg dies

- By Sonja Puzic

For decades, Anne Innis Dagg was the world’s leading expert on giraffes and a staunch advocate for gender equality in the face of sexist attitudes that derailed her academic career.

But even as she compiled “binders and binders” of her research and advocacy work, the Waterloo, Ont., zoologist and feminist was never motivated by accolades, her daughter said.

“She was slogging away doing all of these things for no other reason than she thought it was the right thing to do,” Mary Dagg said in an interview Tuesday, three weeks after her mother’s death.

Innis Dagg died on April 1 at the age of 91, a few years after an award-winning documentar­y about her career and life -- “The Woman Who Loves Giraffes” -- put her accomplish- ments in the spotlight.

The 2018 film, directed by Alison Reid, revisited Innis Dagg’s solo journey in 1956 to study giraffes in the wild in South Africa. It was a pioneering trip by a western scientist who was just 23 years old and had no institutio­nal backing.

“Mom was there before Jane,” Dagg said, referring to Jane Goodall, the British primatolog­ist who famously studied chimpanzee­s in Africa, primarily Tanzania.

The documentar­y also highlighte­d Innis Dagg’s struggles with sexism in academia and the obstacles she faced despite her groundbrea­king research and published work that includes the seminal book “Giraffe: Biology, Behaviour and Conservati­on.”

She earned a PhD in animal behaviour from the University of Waterloo and worked as an assistant professor at the University of Guelph’s zoology department but was denied tenure in the 1970s. That was a devastatin­g blow to her career but it inspired her lifelong fight for women’s rights, her daughter said.

Innis Dagg, who was appointed to the Order of Canada in 2019, wrote several books on feminism, including “MisEducati­on: Women and Canadian Universiti­es.” She fought against systemic discrimina­tion and wrote letters to various institutio­ns advocating for women’s rights and freedom of choice, Dagg said.

She recalled her mother visiting the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto in the 1980s and noticing that a lot of exhibits focused solely on men and their environmen­ts. She wrote a letter to the ROM expressing her dismay and the curator wrote back saying changes would be made.

“If something was wrong, she was going to do whatever it took to make it right,” Dagg said.

After other “giraffolog­ists” sought out Innis Dagg in the 2010s, she began attending events and gaining long-overdue recognitio­n for her animal expertise.

“The Woman Who Loves Giraffes” generated widespread interest in Innis Dagg’s work and gave the scientist an opportunit­y to soak up the applause at the end of film screenings she attended, her daughter said.

“People would always stand up. It would always be a standing ovation, and mom would come to the stage and, you know, she’d be gleaming,” she remembered.

At some question-and-answer sessions people would ask Innis Dagg, who was a daughter of academics, if she was glad that she didn’t get tenure because that put her on a different path in life.

“And she said, ‘Well, I would have preferred to be a professor … my dad was a professor, my husband was a professor. Why can’t I be a professor?”’ Dagg said. “And I think at the end of the day, that’s really what she wanted.”

After the film’s release, the University of Guelph formally apologized to Innis Dagg for the discrimina­tion she experience­d and establishe­d a research scholarshi­p in her honour.

The interest sparked by the documentar­y also inspired the creation of the Anne Innis Dagg Foundation, where Mary Dagg serves as CEO.

The foundation’s mission is to preserve the habitats of giraffes and wildlife through education and conservati­on -- efforts that will continue with a sharpened focus on climate change, Dagg said.

“The plan is, really, to keep going,” she said. “My mom’s vision was huge, and there’s still lots of work to be done.”

Innis Dagg is also survived by her sons, her brother, and other family members.

 ?? ?? This image provided by the Great Plains Zoo shows Chioke in an enclosure at the zoo in Sioux Falls, S.D., in March 2024. The beloved 18-year-old reticulate­d giraffe died, March 28, the zoo announced. Chioke, born in Busch Gardens in Tampa, Fla., came to the zoo in 2007. He grew to nearly 15 feet tall and sired three offspring, who went on to other zoos.
This image provided by the Great Plains Zoo shows Chioke in an enclosure at the zoo in Sioux Falls, S.D., in March 2024. The beloved 18-year-old reticulate­d giraffe died, March 28, the zoo announced. Chioke, born in Busch Gardens in Tampa, Fla., came to the zoo in 2007. He grew to nearly 15 feet tall and sired three offspring, who went on to other zoos.
 ?? Anne Innis Dagg ??
Anne Innis Dagg

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