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Seattle Audubon advocates and organizes for cities where people and birds thrive.

Staff

Hanae Bettencourt, Associate Education Manager

Born on Earth Day, Hanae has always felt a deep connection to all things the natural environment has to offer. She is one of the rare locals in a city full of transplants, developing her passion for environmental stewardship right here in the Puget Sound region. Hanae has been involved with Seattle Audubon for nearly nine years, first joining the team as a Nature Camp Naturalist, and has spent the last four years as Education Associate. In earning her Masters of Education from the University of Washington, she has made it her mission to spread her love of and the importance of the region’s biodiversity to area youth. Outside of work, Hanae enjoys spending quality time at home with her family, working in her garden, baking, birding, and running.

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Claire Catania, Executive Director

A Midwest transplant to the Pacific Northwest, Claire owes her love of nature and birding to a fairly idyllic childhood spent wandering the southeastern shores of Lake Michigan. Though she holds an undergraduate degree in linguistics, Claire also studied conservation biology, has conducted fieldwork abroad, and is a self-professed “bird nerd.” After she completed a master’s degree in nonprofit management, landing at Seattle Audubon in 2014 was a dream come true. When she’s not birding, Claire spends her spare time singing in two small ensembles, volunteering as a consumer board-member for the Midwives’ Association of Washington State, and co-leading a support group for arthritis patients with the Arthritis Foundation. She is also a graduate of the 2017 Master Birder class. Claire is always eager to hear about your hottest bird sightings and learn more about why supporting Seattle Audubon is important to you.
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Anna Dukes, Member Services Assistant

Anna’s background includes an undergraduate degree in biology and an ornithology course in Sapsucker Woods.  She took a brief, 20-year detour to work in finance and returned in 2018 to her roots in the natural world.  She’s grateful to have found her role at Seattle Audubon where she gets to interact with members and volunteers.  Outside of work, Anna and her family enjoy escaping to Lopez Island where cellular service is pleasantly unreliable, ferry lines create opportunities to connect, and nature feels more accessible.

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Brendan McGarry, Nature Shop Co-Coordinator

Brendan has spent his life enthusiastically studying Pacific Northwest natural history with a keen eye for birds. He started attending Seattle Audubon field trips at age nine and was an early member of the Young Birder’s group (then Birdwatch); he has been hovering about Seattle Audubon ever since. Not only does he love birds and nature, but he loves talking about them with anyone who will listen, which is an ideal trait in The Nature Shop. Brendan works hard to encourage people in their personal paths to appreciating and stewarding the natural world. He believes curiosity is one of the best traits we can all foster. In 2019 he completed a master’s in environmental education and hold certificates in northwest natural history and non-profit leadership and administration.

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Joshua Morris, Urban Conservation Manager

Josh loves life. From deep-sea isopods to turkey vultures and every living thing in between. Josh started birding in 2017 and admits he still has a hard time with gulls, swallows, warblers, finches, woodpeckers, sparrows, shorebirds, and seabirds. He feels pretty good about ducks. Josh is delighted to be part of the Seattle Audubon community, where he coordinates Seattle’s Urban Bird Treaty City Coalition, is a member of the Capitol Hill EcoDistrict Steering Committee, and serves on Seattle’s Urban Forestry Commission. His professional background is varied. He’s been a project scientist, a high-school chemistry teacher, a legal assistant, and, for one curious month, a chocolate vendor on Monterey’s Cannery Row. He holds a master’s degree in International Environmental Policy and is a certified naturalist.

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Anna Murphy

Anna Murphy, Americorps Urban Environmental Educator

Anna is an environmental educator and naturalist passionate about sharing the wonders of the Pacific Northwest from shoreline to mountaintop. She is continually interested in increasing cultural awareness in her approach to educational programming. Anna is experienced in leading interpretive hikes and guiding tours about Pacific Northwest flora and fauna for student groups and families through Seattle Parks and Recreation, the Seattle Aquarium and the Seattle Mountaineers Club. In her free time you can find Anna in the greater Seattle area birding and exploring tide pools (her favorite biome!).

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Carol Roll, Development Director

Carol’s passion for non-profit work began as a student at Western Washington University where she studied Psychology, Biology and Spanish. She has worked in fundraising and event management at various Seattle and international organizations focused on conservation, social services and education and now joins Seattle Audubon in 2020. A one-time backyard chicken owner, Carol is looking forward to expanding her bird knowledge beyond the Rhode Island Red. She frequents PNW trails and mountains and can’t wait to learn more about the birds she encounters there, and in her own backyard. In addition to perfecting her hummingbird feeder recipe, she also is cooking her way through the New York Times Cooking app, and is always planning her next international trip.

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Christine Scheele, Program Director

In second grade Christine declared that she would be a forest ranger when she grew up, mostly because she thought it involved running around in the woods all day. To this day, running around in the woods is a large part of her life (via trail running, backpacking, and camping), but her professional aspirations have evolved. She found that a bachelor’s degree in biology and a master’s degree in education is a combo that lends itself to professional flexibility, and prior to working at Seattle Audubon Christine worked in stormwater management and permitting, assisted biologists with fieldwork, led several restoration teams, and taught at various environmental education centers and schools. It turns out that helping people learn about nature is her favorite job, which is why she is delighted with her role at Seattle Audubon.

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Ansley Silva, Nature Shop Co-coordinator

Ansley is originally from the Appalachia area of Georgia: a place rich with warblers in the spring and summer months.  She has made a couple of circles around the US, one circle around South America, and landed in Washington for the second time with intent to stay.  Her background is in natural resource conservation with a focus in biodiversity measurements.  She has previously worked in various areas, mainly in conservation for nonprofits and the federal government, but also in the retail industry. 

 


Russell Steele, Finance & Operations Director

A resident of the Pacific Northwest for 40 years, Russ was the Seattle Audubon Nature Shop Manager from 1998-2016 until ascending to his current role. A long-time environmental advocate as evidenced by his previous volunteer involvement as a board member of the Bicycle Alliance of Washington and board chair of Earthshare of Washington, Russ has also been on boards of school PTAs. When not working, Russ can be found cycling, hiking, or taking long, urban walks with his wife of 40 years. His other distractions are his two granddaughters who live out-of-state. Though only able to identify three birds when he started at Seattle Audubon, while professing to know nothing about birds, he continually surprises himself and others with his assimilated knowledge and a now healthy lifelist. 

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Wendy Walker, Community Engagement Manager

Wendy's love of birds started with Ruby-throated Hummingbirds, and helping her dad find and plow around Killdeer nests in their Ohio farm fields. After moving to Seattle for a career as a stage manager for theatre and opera, it was a pleasure to find familiar birds like the Killdeer and to learn new ones. Two decades in theatre led to communications and project management roles at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and the chance to teach colleagues about the White-crowned Sparrows that sing in the foundation's courtyard every spring. Birds provided a consistent thread through career and life changes, so it seems natural that Wendy found out about the Community Engagement role while volunteering for the Christmas Bird Count and promptly applied. Her work includes managing the volunteer program and fostering organizational partnerships to engage our local community in protecting birds and their natural habitats.

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Seattle Audubon is nonprofit, tax-exempt 501(c)(3) organization. Copyright Seattle Audubon.