Pine Barrens scientist, educator dies at 93
Bridged conservation biology, environmental movement

By KIRK MOORE
and PAULA SCULLY

V. Eugene Vivian, a scientist and educator who taught thousands of schoolchildren about the Pine Barrens and trained a generation of environmental workers, died Sunday at age 93, family and friends said.

"As a mentor and a friend and someone I admired, he's right on the top of the list. He was a really great man," said Stafford Township Councilman John Spodofora, who worked closely with Vivian on school programs and the township Environmental Commission. "He touched a lot of lives during that time, working with the kids."

As a college science professor in the 1960s and '70s, Vivian bridged traditional North American conservation biology with the nascent environmental movement, emphasizing field studies for students in the forests and marshes of southern New Jersey. As momentum built in the 1970s for preserving the 1 million-acre Pinelands region, a number of Vivian's students became involved.

Jeanette Lloyd of Beach Haven found the oldest pitch pine in Manahawkin while she was a teacher in the Stafford school district, and Vivian had worked with her to save it. With Vivian's help, she and Spodofora developed a a program to make Stafford elementary students aware of their environment, using field programs to study the environment in person instead of through textbooks.

"It was wonderful for me and wonderful for the children and the parents who accompanied us," Lloyd said. "We went to a lot of places we wouldn't have gone if it weren't for Dr. Vivian. People can go to the cranberry bogs at the end of Oxycocus Road. We went thought them to find endangered species. We also found the headwaters for the Mill Creek and the Cedar Creek in Manahawkin.

"We walked out in the woods. We walked the stream. We did neat things that brought science to life. He opened a whole world that we didn't even know about, and for that, I'm eternally grateful to him," Lloyd said. Vivian was a professor of environmental studies at Glassboro State College, now Rowan University, and chaired the science department until he retired in 1984. He remained active in environmental affairs, working as a consultant, educator, and chairman of the Little Egg Harbor Township Environmental Commission, where he also started the township's recycling program. He later moved to Edgewater Park in Burlington County.

After a stint at Paterson State College, Vivian joined the Glassboro faculty in 1955, and by the mid-1960s he was drawing attention with his innovative approach to teaching biology in the field. The National Wildlife Federation named him the 1967 "national conservationist of the year." That was when he founded the Conservation and Environmental Studies Center at Whitesbog in Pemberton Township — an old berry farming village that became the place where many young students first learned about the Pine Barrens.

"We had students coming from all over New Jersey to learn about the Pine Barrens," said educator Terry O'Leary, who was a graduate student with Vivian in 1976 and worked with him on Whitesbog, later going on to teach environmental ecology and field ecology on the staff of the Pinelands Regional School District.

"He truly loved the Pine Barrens and was responsible for introducing tens of thousands of schoolchildren to the beauty and mystery of this wondrous region," said Michele Byers, executive director of the New Jersey Conservation Foundation, who worked with Vivian in the early 1980s when she was a young foundation staffer based at Whitesbog.

Vivian, Byers and others eventually organized the Whitesbog Preservation Trust to restore historic buildings in the secluded village. For years before that, the environmental studies center operated out of the old village general store, and trained a generation of outdoor educators there, many of them Glassboro graduates.

"He was a fascinating man. To work in the outdoors with him, you learned something every minute. He loved science, and he loved telling stories," recalled Lois Schoeck of Toms River, a retired teacher who studied with Vivian at Glassboro and became one of his original staff members at Whitesbog.

"He was much better as a professor outdoors than indoors," Schoeck added. "I was not a science person. . . . He took a city person and taught me most of what I know about the outdoors."

"He donated the first cache of books to open the library here," said naturalist Chris Claus at Cattus Island County Park in Toms River, where Vivian served on the board of trustees. The library is named for Vivian.

As a consultant, Vivian helped southern Ocean County towns deal with environmental issues and create environmental commissions and ordinances.

His field survey worked identified rare plants and animals in the Forked River Mountains of western Lacey and Waretown (Ocean Township), and he helped the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service with their enhancement of Cedar Bonnet Island, along Route 72 in the middle of Manahawkin Bay. The freshwater pond for waterfowl there was his brainchild, O'Leary said.

Vivian students have been prominent in environmental causes, such as Rowan professor Gary Patterson, who became an early member of the state Pinelands Commission and was the university's environmental education master's program advisor until 2004.

"I was writing a piece (on Sunday) for the Pinelands Preservation Alliance, commenting on a teacher training program, and how this maintains a long tradition started by Dr. Vivian," said Bob Bartlett, a Barnegat Light photographer and author who profiled Vivian in his 2007 book "People of the Pines."

"And then I got a call from his wife," Bartlett added. "It all started with him."

From the Asbury Park Press

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