Pioneer in Canadian wildlife highlighted in unique travelling exhibit in Guelph

A travelling exhibit to highlight Anne Innis Dagg, an 89-year-old who has been a pioneer for Canadian wildlife for decades, is now on display in Guelph.
The Anne Innis Dagg Exhibit: Musings of a Scientist, Feminist, Activist is set up at the University of Guelph’s McLaughlin Library and depicts much of her extraordinary career in science.
In 1956, Innis Dagg travelled to South Africa to study giraffes, making her among the first in the world to study animals in the wild, on that continent.
“It was magnificent. I spent a whole year there,” she told CTV News.
Fast forward to today, she’s globally known for her wildlife research, but her triumph didn’t come without struggle. Innis Dagg said because she is a woman, she faced many hurdles.
“I planed to England and then I talked to the man that I wrote to and he said 'oh no you can't because you’re a woman' and I’m thinking 'is this necessary?’ and I’m thinking ‘well what will I do? I’m halfway there,'” Innis Dagg said.
When she returned to Canada and started working as a professor at the University of Guelph, she said she continued to face inequality. The dean at the time, denied her tenure.
“They said you can’t have it anymore because you’re a woman. It was a crushing blow, really. Because I’d been working so hard for so many years,” Innis Dagg said.
Innis Dagg then created the Anne Innis Dagg Foundation and now, her travelling exhibit at the University of Guelph, is drawing attention to the past and present obstacles faced by women in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM).
Innis Dagg’s daughter, Mary Dagg, is a board member with the foundation.
“A lot of the time women will say they don’t dress in anything that makes them look like a woman. So a lot of them wont wear makeup, they won’t wear dresses, they won’t wear any jewelry, they lower their voice. Some of them tape their breasts down. They don’t want to come across as a woman, they want to be seen as a scientists,” admitted Mary Dagg.
Innis Dagg said over time women have become more welcome in STEM but she said there are still challenges to overcome.
On the website for the Anne Innis Dagg Foundation, it said that Innis Dagg officially received apologies from the academic institutions that once shunned he. It also stated that in 2019 the University of Guelph established the Dr. Anne Innis Dagg Summer Research Scholarship, awarded annually to one female undergraduate student majoring in either Zoology or Biodiversity.
The travelling exhibit will remain in Guelph until August. It will then be installed at Wilfrid Laurier University in Waterloo.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Unable to leave Syria, mothers of Canadian children forfeit repatriation to keep their families together
In a choice forced upon them by the Canadian government, four mothers have made the agonizing decision to forfeit an opportunity to repatriate their children from open air prisons in northeast Syria.

MP Han Dong issues libel notice to Global News over China interference reporting
Lawyers representing Toronto MP Han Dong served Global News with a libel notice on Friday over reports that alleged he spoke to a Chinese diplomat in February 2021 about delaying the release of the two Michaels, and that he was a 'witting affiliate' of Chinese interference networks – allegations that Dong denies.
Federal minimum wage, taxes on alcohol: Here's what's changing in Canada April 1
The federal minimum wage is increasing from $15.55 per hour to $16.65, and taxes are going up on gas and alcohol nationwide starting April 1.
Here's what to expect from the Canadian cottage market this year
A recent report from Royal LePage is predicting a drop in prices for Canadian cabins and cottages this year as demand softens from economic uncertainty and low housing stock.
Interim RCMP commissioner would support Criminal Code changes for stricter gun laws
Interim RCMP commissioner Michael Duheme says he would support the Criminal Code changes recommended in the Mass Casualty Commission report to implement stricter gun laws.
Akwesasne: Bodies of two more migrants found, bring total dead to eight
Police say the bodies of eight migrants have been retrieved from the waters off the Mohawk Territory of Akwesasne, straddling the Canada - U.S. border. The people whose bodies were recovered Thursday and Friday consisted of two families of Romanian and Indian origins who were likely trying to enter the U.S. illegally, police said Friday.
Donald Trump facing at least one felony charge in New York case: AP sources
Former U.S. president Donald Trump is facing multiple charges of falsifying business records, including at least one felony offence, in the indictment handed down by a Manhattan grand jury, two people familiar with the matter told The Associated Press on Friday.
A 106-year-old from the Philippines is Vogue's oldest ever cover model
Vogue Philippines has revealed Apo Whang-Od as the cover star of its April issue, a move that makes the 106-year-old tattoo artist from the Philippines the oldest person ever to appear on the front of Vogue.
Trudeau defends appointment of cabinet minister's sister-in-law as interim ethics commissioner
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is defending the appointment of senior Liberal cabinet minister Dominic LeBlanc's sister-in-law as Canada's interim ethics commissioner.