THE MEMBERS OF THE BODERCATS WORKING GROUP
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Outreach |
These core individuals/organizations contribute to the BWG in the following ways: Paul Beier: Paul, a professor at Northern Arizona University and 2005 Aldo Leopold Leadership Fellow, is a scientific adviser to BWG. Paul has done extensive field work on puma in fragmented habitats in southern California, and in the Sky Island Region of the Southwestern US and northern Mexico, and will join the Florida Panther Recovery Team on his return to the US in August 2000. Paul will help structure the research program and will bring special expertise in population modeling and PVA. Paul may be able to involve graduate student researchers in BWG research.
Melissa Grigione: Melissa, is an associate professor at Pace University (Pleasantville, NY) in the Graduate program in Environmental Science and Policy, and co-founder of the Bordercats Working Group. She will serve as a coordinator to the BWG and the IUCN-Cat Specialist Group. She is working with John Morrison from World Wildlife Fund (WWF), Kurt Menke, and Robert Thomas, on a Geographical Information System (GIS)-based recovery map for all bordercat species. This map will follow the mapping protocols developed in a WWF in a report (1997) entitled, "A Framework for Identifying High Priority Areas and Actions for the Conservation of Tigers in the Wild." She, John and Robert will also work closely with Dave Foreman (and the Wildlands Project mapping group), Jack Humphrey (and the Sky Island Alliance mapping group) and Eric Sanderson (GIS ecologist at Wildlife Conservation International). In addition, with the assistance of Robert, she will develop a web presence to raise awareness about these endangered species and to provide an internet link to both the conservation community and the international populous at large. Melissa will continue to apply for funds, with Round River Conservation Studies and other researchers, to fuel the research portion of the BWG. In addition, she will coordinate research projects that will synthesize data for bordercat specimens (from museum and sighting reports) and review all literature on bordercats. A sighting/distribution map for each species has been produced from this effort. She will work as an expert witness on legal issues between the U.S. Border Patrol and co-plaintiffs Frontera Audubon Society, Lone Star Sierra Club, and Defenders of Wildlife as they negotiate ways to conserve neotropical cats near the U.S./Mexican border. Rurik List: Rurik is an associate researcher at the Institute of Ecology from the National University of Mexico. He is a Mexican carnivore and conservation biologist. His work focuses on research and implementation of actions that advance the conservation of carnivores, threatened species and their habitats. He has a special interest in species’ reintroduction, and in the identification and protection of biologically important areas. An important part of his activities are on outreach about his work subjects and areas, and about Nature conservation issues in general. Most of his career has taken place in grasslands and temperate forests. He has been involved in research or in conservation efforts with species like the black-footed ferret, wolf, kit and gray foxes, coyote, bison, ringtail and jaguar.Carlos is one of the foremost jaguar biologists. Currently attached with the Northern Rockies Conservation Cooperative and the Denver Zoo, he studies all three neotropical cat species in our western bioregion of Arizona-New Mexico/Sonora-Chihuahua. Craig, Arizona representative to Defenders of Wildlife, is our jaguar conservation team liaison. Craig has already established our sighting information data for jaguars throughout the southwest and will continue to review the jaguar sighting literature for future sightings. Craig will work with Melissa to develop a similar sighting protocol for ocelots and jaguarundis so that these points can be put on a GIS layer to authenticate historical ranges for each species. Craig will facilitate constituency building in the Southwest and will also work closely with individuals at the Arizona Department of Fish and Game.
Other Core individuals/institutions (who
did not attend the initial Bordercats Working Group meeting):
Julio Carrera López - SEMARNAP
Anthony Giordano: Anthony is a doctoral fellow and graduate teaching assistant at Texas Tech University, and Director of Conservation Science & Field Projects for S.P.E.C.I.E.S. For his dissertation research, he studied the spatial ecology and population structure of jaguars in Paraguay, as well as surveying them using noninvasive genetic methods. Anthony is a doctoral fellow and graduate teaching assistant at Texas Tech University, and Director of Conservation Science & Field Projects for S.P.E.C.I.E.S. For his dissertation research, he studied the spatial ecology and population structure of jaguars in Paraguay, as well as surveying them using noninvasive genetic methods. Anthony is pursuing the initiation of research on carnivores in the borderlands, including jaguarundis and ocelots in the Big Bend- El Carmen Mountain Ecosystems, as well as on private lands in South Texas. He will secure funding for efforts to survey and research jaguars in Sonora-Mexico, as well as the southern Carmen Mountains in Mexico.
He is one of the co-founders of the Tijeras Canyon Safe Passage Coalition and currently serves as Chairman. Kurt also teaches GIS and Cartography at Central New Mexico Community College, and is a member of the Society for Conservation GIS. Kurt has been assisting the BWG in mapping habitat and corridors, writing, including giving presentations and participating in outreach workshops.
His recent focus has been on how to measure conservation progress in WWF’s ecoregional programs. John’s educational background and early career focused on Geology (BS, Emory University) and Hydrologic Engineering (MS, University of California, Berkeley). Worldwide travel and birdwatching convinced him to return to graduate school and obtain a higher degree in Conservation Biology (MS, University of California, Davis). Robert has been working on all the GIS initiatives in a variety of capacities from the onset of the BWG formation including the BWG web site. He is currently with Melissa on a Puma telemetry project taking place in Chile, as well as doing fund raising, and web pages updates. Previously he worked for a local city in the Sacramento Valley starting their enterprise GIS program. Robert's future plans are to attend graduate school in Environmental Science & Planning utilizing remote sensing technology with GIS and neural network habitat modeling to further the conservation ecology research of bordercats.Allison is a Postdoctoral researcher in the department of Ecology and Environmental Biology at the University of Kansas. She uses both theoretical and empirical approaches to investigate fundamental questions in evolutionary biology, with an emphasis on incorporating the complexity inherent in natural populations. Alison works on a number of projects for the BWG and has been a key contributor on a number of peer review articles.
Dennis Sizemore: Dennis is the Executive Director at the Round River Conservation Studies and serves on the Board of the Taku-Atlen Conservancy and with
The Wildlands Project.
A list of affiliate-scientists and institutions
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