Esther Ngumbi
Esther Ndumi Ngumbi is a Kenyan entomologist and academic who is currently Assistant Professor of Entomology and African-American Studies at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign. She was awarded the 2018 Society for Experimental Biology Presidential Award. Early life and educationEsther Ngumbi grew up in Kwale County, a rural farming community in Kenya.[1][2] She was introduced to farming at the age of seven, when her parents gave her a strip of land to cultivate cabbages.[3] As a child she became aware of the challenges that farmers faced, including drought and bad soils.[3] The first time she left her village was to attend Kenyatta University, where she earned her Bachelor's and Master's degrees.[4][5] In 2007 she was awarded an American Association of University Women (AAUW) International Fellowship that allowed her to complete a doctoral degree in entomology at Auburn University.[1][6][7] In 2011 she became one of the first people from her community to achieve a doctorate.[1][8] After earning her PhD she remained at Auburn University as a postdoctoral scholar.[3] Research and careerNgumbi was appointed Assistant Professor of Entomology and African-American studies and the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign in 2018.[9] She also teaches science communication.[10] She studies the way that herbivores, plants, micro-organisms and insects make use of volatile and non-volatile chemical signals.[9] These include volatile organic compounds (VOCs) that mediate conversations between plants, herbivores and microbes.[9] Ngumbi believes that better urban agriculture can help to combat unhealthy eating.[11] In 2019 Ngumbi delivered the plenary lecture at the British Ecological Society annual meeting.[12] Academic service and recognitionShe was awarded the 2017 Emerging Sustainability Leader Award and Women of Colour Award.[13][14] In 2018 Ngumbi was awarded the Society for Experimental Biology's President's Medal.[15] Ngumbi is an active science communicator and has contributed to Mail & Guardian, The Moth, Scientific American and the World Economic Forum.[16][17][18][19] She has appeared on Wisconsin Public Radio.[20] Ngumbi was selected by Barack Obama to be part of the Young African Leadership Initiative.[12] She mentors young researchers through the Clinton Foundation. She has campaigned for girls from rural communities to have better access to education, particularly in science and technology.[4] Working with her family, Ngumbi helped to establish Dr Ndumi Faulu Academy, a school in her hometown that serves over 100 middle school students.[1][21][22] in 2021 Ngumbi was awarded the Mani L. Bhaumik Award for Public Engagement with Science by the American Association for the Advancement of Science.[10] Selected publicationsHer publications include:
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