provided to The Santiva Chronicle

Just as the bald eagle, our national symbol, faced extinction in the continental U.S. in 1976, Tina Morris was beginning her graduate work at Cornell University. By luck and circumstance, she was selected to reintroduce the species into New York State in the hope that eagles could repopulate eastern North America. On April 9, she talks about her conservation work and book Return to the Sky: The Surprising Story of How One Woman and Seven Eaglets Helped Restore the Bald Eagle at J.N. “Ding” Darling National Wildlife Refuge on Sanibel Island.
Part of the 2026 “Ding” Darling free winter lecture series, Morris’ April 9 appearances take place at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. at The Roost outside the refuge Visitor & Education Center.
Young and with no field experience, Morris faced the challenges of saving the iconic bird while striving for acceptance in the unfamiliar, male-dominated world of raptor biology. Playing mother to seven eagles forced her to transcend the isolation and tedium of field research to rescue an endangered species while in turn rescuing herself.
After completing her graduate work in ornithology and wildlife biology at Cornell in 1978 and working many years for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and Nature Conservancyv– focusing on endangered species and critical habitat conservation — Morris spent 23 years teaching English and biology. Since her retirement in 2020, she has devoted her time to writing, especially creative non-fiction with a science or nature focus.
“Ding” Darling Wildlife Society-Friends of the Refuge (DDWS) co-hosts the eight-part lecture series with the refuge and through financial support from sponsors. While the refuge auditorium is undergoing renovations, lectures take place in The Roost outdoor pavilion. Seating is limited on a first-come basis. Guests are welcome to bring their own lawn chairs to ensure a seat. Most of the open-air seating is under cover, however DDWS suggests sunscreen, bug spray, and weather-appropriate attire.
See the listing of the season’s remaining lectures below and at dingdarlingsociety.org/lecture-series. Starred (*) lectures indicate those with book-signings following the lecture.
Note: Opinions expressed in guest lectures do not necessarily reflect the views of refuge and DDWS management, staff, and board of directors.
*April 9 – Author/Conservationist Tina Morris, Return to the Sky: The Surprising Story of How One Woman and Seven Eaglets Helped Restore the Bald Eagle
*April 16 – Sanibel Author Charles Sobczak, The Living Gulf Coast: A Nature Guide to Southwest Florida — Sponsor: Hightower Advisors Fort Myers



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