Jane Goodall returns to Carmel to help save sea otters
Briefly

Margaret Wentworth Owings played a pivotal role in the conservation of sea otters in the northern Pacific Ocean. After discovering a small population off Big Sur in the 1930s, she founded Friends of the Sea Otter in 1968, which worked for over 50 years to rescue this species from the brink of extinction. Owings, respected for her environmental advocacy, also collaborated with notable conservationists like Jane Goodall, emphasizing the importance of preserving sea otters and their rights to share ocean resources. Her tireless efforts led to legal protection for sea otters under state and federal law.
In the 1960s, Jane Goodall was invited to visit Big Sur by Margaret Owings, who escorted her down the coast to see the sea otters and learn of their plight.
Margaret Owings believed that the sea otters have as much right to their share of the ocean's bounty as the fishermen, Goodall wrote.
Owings founded Friends of the Sea Otter, an organization which worked for more than 50 years to play a lead role in bringing the animal back from the edge of extinction.
Owings, called the Jane Goodall of the West Coast, has been pivotal in advocating for the sea otter's protection under state and federal law.
Read at www.montereyherald.com
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