Bruce Menge, the Distinguished University Professor of Integrative Biology and the Wayne and Gladys Valley Chair of Marine Biology at Oregon State University, was inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Sciences on Sept. 10, in Cambridge, Mass.
The same day as Menge’s induction ceremony, his wife, OSU distinguished professor Jane Lubchenco, was inducted by Pope Francis into the Pontifical Academy of Sciences at the Vatican.
The American Academy of Arts and Sciences was founded in 1780 during the Revolutionary War by 62 scholar-patriots including John Adams and John Hancock. Menge, who has been conducting research at the Oregon coast for four decades, was elected to the academy in 2020 but his induction was postponed due to the pandemic.
The academy noted that Menge “pioneered long-term studies within individual sites, and extended those studies to regional and global biogeographical scales. Earlier this year, Menge published a study showing that ecological communities on the Oregon coast are being subtly destabilized by the pressures of climate change despite giving an appearance of stress resistance.
The Pontifical Academy of Sciences was established with its current name in 1936 by Pope Pius XI and traces its roots to the Academy of the Lynxes, founded in 1603 as the world’s first exclusively scientific academy. Membership is limited to 80 academicians worldwide and is based solely on scientific merit and moral character, regardless of religious affiliation or beliefs.
Lubchenco is a former administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and also spent two years as the State Department’s first U.S. Science Envoy for the Ocean. In 2021 the Biden administration tapped Lubchenco to lead climate and environmental science efforts in the White House as the deputy director of climate and environment.