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List of Conservation Committee Members: 2006 - 2007
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| Colleen Cassady St. Clair, Chair |
| Guillermo Paz-y-Miño C., Past Chair |
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| Allison C. Alberts |
| Daniel T. Blumstein |
| Richard Buchholz |
| Elizabeth V. Lonsdorf |
| J. Cully Nordby |
| Debra Shier |
| Ronald R. Swaisgood |
| Ilonka von Lippke |
| Mark L. Wildhaber |
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| More information about our members |
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| Colleen Cassady St. Clair, PhD, Chair |
Department of Biological Sciences
University of Alberta
cstclair@ualberta.ca |
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| I work at the interface between Behavioural Ecology and Conservation
Biology by studying the movement behaviour of animals living in
human-altered landscapes. Recent work with my students concerns the way
animals assess and respond to habitat barriers and corridors. My group is
also studying the relative importance of landscape configuration to species
distribution and population parameters by comparing these landscape effects
to small-scale habitat selection and large-scale weather phenomena. A final
aspect of this research assesses the potential to use behavioural
manipulation, such as aversive conditioning, to solve management problems
that stem from changes to the movement and distribution of animals in
fragmented landscapes. |
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| Guillermo Paz-y-Mino C., PhD, Past Chair |
Department of Biology
Kalyan K. Ghosh Center for Science & Technology ST-L310
Worcester College
486 Chandler Street
Worcester, MA 01602-2597, USA
e-mail: gpazymino@worcester.edu
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| I have broad interest and training in different fields of science,
including behavioral ecology, cognitive ethology, neurobiology, and
conservation biology. My research focuses in three main areas: the link
between different levels of social organization and the cognitive abilities
of animals (social cognition); the association between socio-sexual
behaviors and the communication of signals for the recognition of kin
(particularly the role of social memory for kin recognition); and the
application of behavioral paradigms in conservation biology. I work with
different biological systems including birds, mammals, and nematodes. |
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| Allison C. Alberts, PhD |
Applied Conservation Division
Zoological Society of San Diego
aalberts@sandiegozoo.org |
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| Much of my career has been spent studying iguanas, and I currently serve as
co-chair of the IUCN-World Conservation Union Iguana Specialist Group.
Because they facilitate germination, promote seedling growth, and disperse
the seeds of the native plants they consume, iguanas play an important role
in maintaining healthy ecosystems. Although my early work concentrated on
social communication in desert and green iguanas, since 1993, I have been
carrying out applied research on the critically endangered rock iguanas of
the Caribbean. My work includes studies on the behavior and reproductive
ecology of wild iguana populations, experiments to determine optimal egg
incubation parameters, population surveys, translocation programs, and
educational outreach efforts. Most recently, my colleagues and I have been
exploring the utility of in-country "headstarting" programs, in which
juvenile rock iguanas are reared in a safe environment until they are no
longer vulnerable to introduced predators, as a conservation strategy for
augmenting wild populations. In addition to my work in the Caribbean, I
have a long-standing interest in the conservation of biodiversity in
Southern California. My research group is currently involved in recovery
programs for a number of threatened species, as well as outreach in local
communities to increase public understanding and appreciation. One of our
primary focus areas continues to be the restoration of endangered Southern
California ecosystems to a more natural, healthy, and productive state. We
are actively exploring a variety of restoration approaches, including
reintroduction of keystone vertebrate species to their native range, seed
banking for revegetation of disturbed areas, and invasive plant removal. |
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| Daniel T. Blumstein, PhD |
Department of Organismic Biology, Ecology & Evolution
University of California Los Angeles
marmots@ucla.edu |
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| I am a behavioral ecologist broadly interested in the evolution of social
and antipredator behavior. My research has several themes: it is broadly
interdisciplinary; it combines in situ, ex situ, and comparative studies;
it uses the process of research to educate students and members of the
community about science; and it integrates theory with applied biology.
Current work focuses on three questions: 1) developing predictive models
of the persistence of antipredator behavior under relaxed-selection; 2)
understanding the evolution of complex communication and sociality; 3)
developing an empirically-derived evolutionary ecology of fear.
Additionally, I am the principle investigator on a project that develops
JWatcher--a freely distributed program to quantify and analyze behavior.
My conservation behavior experience includes both theoretical reviews which
highlight and identify the relevance of behavioral knowledge for
conservation questions, as well as theoretical and empirical work focusing
on ways to increase reintroduction success. I am a member of the IUCN
Reintroduction Specialist Group. I work with marmots, kangaroos,
wallabies, and birds. |
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| Richard Buchholz, PhD |
Department of Biology
University of Mississippi
byrb@olemiss.edu |
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| I study the adaptive function of multiple sexual signaling structures
primarily in birds. I am also exploring how variation in animal behavior
impacts the conservation of isolated and fragmented populations. |
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| Elizabeth V. Lonsdorf |
Lincoln Park Zoo
University of Chicago
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| Elizabeth is the Director of Field Conservation at Lincoln
Park Zoo in Chicago and a faculty member of the Committee on
Evolutionary Biology at the University of Chicago. She administers the
zoo's support of and participation in field conservation projects, which
include overseeing the zoo's Africa/Asia and Neotropic Field Conservation
Funds. Elizabeth works at Gombe National Park, Tanzania, where she
supervises a health monitoring project for the Gombe chimpanzees
(funded by the US Fish and Wildlife Great Ape Conservation Fund). This
project includes the Lincoln Park Zoo, the Jane Goodall Institute,
University of Minnesota and Tanzania National Parks. Lonsdorf serves on
the Field Conservation Committee of the American Zoo and Aquarium
Association (AZA) and on the Section on Great Apes of the IUCN Primate
Specialist Group. |
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| J. Cully Nordby, PhD |
University of California Berkeley
nordby@nature.berkeley.edu |
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| My research focuses on the behavioral ecology and conservation biology of
birds, with particular emphasis on understanding how native species respond
behaviorally to exotic species invasions. Because exotic invasions can
alter ecosystems very rapidly, it is crucial that we assess whether native
species possess enough behavioral flexibility, or plasticity, to cope with
changes in their environment. I am currently examining how changes in
habitat associated with the invasion of an Atlantic cordgrass into the salt
marshes of San Francisco Bay affects the reproductive, territorial and
foraging behavior and interspecific competition of resident song sparrows
and marsh wrens. |
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| Debra Shier, MA |
University of California Davis
dmshier@ucdavis.edu |
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| For nearly a decade I have been studying the ways in which an understanding
of an animal's behavior can directly contribute to conservation decisions.
My research has focused on small mammals that play an integral role in
ecosystem processes. Specifically, my research addresses the social and
ecological influences on the development of antipredator behavior. My
studies are applied to both captive breeding-reintroduction and
translocation programs. My current project uses black-tailed prairie dogs
(Cynomys ludovicianus) to investigate the importance of family social
interactions for survival and the kinds of captive learning experiences
that are required for the development of effective antipredator behavior
after release into the wild. |
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| Ronald R. Swaisgood, Ph.D. |
Center for Reproduction of Endangered Species
Zoological Society of San Diego
rswaisgood@sandiegozoo.org |
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| I am a broadly trained behavioral ecologist seeking avenues to apply my
expertise in support of conservation efforts. I have been employed at the
Center for Reproduction of Endangered Species (CRES), Zoological Society of
San Diego since 1995. I maintain several active projects, primarily with
the giant panda and rhinoceros species. For the past few years I have spent
several months each year at the panda breeding center in the Wolong Nature
Reserve (China) conducting studies aimed at improving captive breeding and
building base knowledge for potential use in conservation of wild
populations. Research areas include chemical communication, mate choice,
reproductive behavior, stress, well-being, enrichment, and maternal care. I
also have conducted studies of reproductive behavior and physiology and
chemical communication in the southern and northern white rhino and Indian
rhino in captive settings, seeking to determine the cause of reproductive
failure in the F2 generation. For the past three years I have conducted a
similar study with white rhino in Umfolozi Game Reserve, South Africa. More
recently, I have been involved in a research program examining the use of
scent communication to reduce aggression and fight-related mortalities in
translocated black rhino in Namibia and South Africa. I also maintain an
active program with the pygmy loris, studying chemical communication, mate
choice and reproductive behavior. |
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| Ilonka von Lippke, MSc |
University of California Los Angeles
ilonka@ucla.edu |
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| I am interested in the evolution of social behavior, particularly in bird
systems. I study how behavioral, ecological and genetic factors influence
the variation in an individual's breeding success, the formation and
maintenance of family social dynamics, and within group conflict. I am also
interested in conservation genetics. I have conducted research in
neotropical ornithology, particularly in mainland Ecuador and the Galapagos
Archipelago, South America. |
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| Mark L. Wildhaber |
Columbia Environmental Research Center |
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| Mark is a quantitative ecologist and conservation
behaviorist at Columbia Environmental Research Center, US Geological
Survey. His research includes studies of the reproductive behavior and
physiology and abiotic and biotic requirements for reproductive success of
fish species that are federally-listed as threatened or endangered. One of
Mark's ultimate goals is to use this information, along with information on
fish behavior as it relates to thermoregulation, foraging, and bioenergetics,
to develop mathematical models within an individual-based and spatially-
explicit framework that describe aquatic community dynamics. |
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