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ABC
Staff Biographies
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Dr.
George H. Fenwick, President, received
a Ph.D. from the Department of Pathobiology at
Johns Hopkins University, studying the effects
of alien species on native avifauna. He founded
American Bird Conservancy in early 1994, and became
President upon its merger with the U.S. and Pan
American Sections of the International Council
for the Preservation of Birds later that year.
He worked in a variety of capacities during 15
years with The Nature Conservancy including Vice
President and Director of Ecosystem Conservation,
Acting Director of Science, and Chair of the Steering
Committee for the Last Great Places Campaign.
Prior to that, he has worked for the Chesapeake
Bay Foundation, Earthsatellite Corporation, and
been an instructor at the University of Virginia.
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Jo
Ann Abell, Development Officer, has an Associate's
degree in English. Prior to joining ABC in 2004,
she worked as a Program Control Analyst for Constella
Group, a government contracting firm, and previous
to that as a Public Relations/Communications Assistant
for The Conservation Fund. She writes extensively
on birds and nature and her work has appeared
in a variety of national magazines.
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Bob
Altman, Northern Pacific Rainforest Bird
Conservation Region (BCR) Coordinator, Partners
in Flight, has a degree in wildlife biology from
Eastern Kentucky University with graduate course
work at Oregon State University. He has been active
in Partners in Flight since its inception, with
several committee positions at state and regional
levels, including his current position as Chairperson
of the Oregon-Washington chapter. Before coming
to ABC, Mr. Altman worked for seven years as an
independent ornithologist conducting avian research
and monitoring under the business name of Avifauna
Northwest. He is author of the Olive-sided Flycatcher
species account for Birds of North America, and
lead author on a book chapter on wildlife-habitat
relationships in western Oregon and Washington.
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Hugo
Arnal, Director of International Sustainable
Conservation, has worked throughout Latin America
on protected areas and natural resource management
for more than 25 years, conducting environmental
feasibility studies, new park creation projects,
nature tourism programs, and community-based conservation
projects throughout the Andes. He has also organized
numerous participatory training programs for Latin
America and Caribbean national park services and
NGOs. Before joining ABC, he worked for The Nature
Conservancy, from 1993 to 2003 as both the Venezuela
and Ecuador Country Program Director. Prior to
that, he worked for five years in the Not-for-profit
conservation sector of Venezuela, his native country,
leading the creation and expansion of protected
areas, as well as the establishment of the first
non-governmental conservation reserve in the Venezuelan
Andes. He has also been the Superintendent of
Sierra Nevada National Park and Acting Director
of the Andean Region of INPARQUES, the Venezuelan
National Parks Service. He holds a Degree in Biology
from Universidad Central de Venezuela, with majors
in ecology and marine biology, and a Certificate
of Graduate Studies on Tropical Ecology from Universidad
de Los Andes, Venezuela. Fluent in English and
Spanish, Mr. Arnal is an avid hiker and alpine
climber, with several new climbing routes and
major mountains throughout the Andes and the Venezuelan
Guayana highlands.
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Elizabeth
Brenner, Director of Membership, Liz
is a native of Rhode Island. Prior to joining
ABC in 2004, Liz was the manager of member services
and award programs for the Healthcare Distribution
Management Association in Reston, Virginia. She
lives in Virginia, with her husband and two sons.
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Dan
Casey, Northern Rockies Bird Conservation
Region (BCR) Coordinator, began his interest in
birds nearly 40 years ago in rural New Jersey.
He has both a B.S. and an M.S. in wildlife biology
from Colorado State University, his thesis work
focusing on bird community response to heavy browsing
by deer in western Pennsylvania oak forest. He
has conducted baseline bird surveys throughout
the western U.S. as a consultant. Before joining
ABC in 2000, Dan spent 16 years with Montana Fish,
Wildlife and Parks, where he designed and directed
research on the effects of habitat management
practices on forest breeding bird communities,
as well as projects directed at waterfowl, Ospreys,
Bald Eagles and elk. Dan served 6 years as chairman
of Montana Partners In Flight, and is a past Chair
of the PIF Western Working Group. He authored
the 2000 Montana Bird Conservation Plan, and was
awarded “Montana Conservationist of the
Year” in 2006. He has served on the Technical
Committees of the Prairie Potholes, Northern Great
Plains, and Intermountain West Joint Ventures.
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Susannah
Casey, GIS Technician - Northern Rockies.
Susannah grew up in the trees and creeks of eastern
Ohio. After getting a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree
in graphic design from Ohio State University,
she moved west to Colorado and then to Montana
in 1983 with her ornithologist husband, Daniel.
Prior to working for ABC as a GIS specialist,
Susannah started and ran an educational toy store
(1984-1994), worked as a graphic artist, carpenter,
teacher’s aide and medical transcriptionist.
She finds great satisfaction working for ABC and
the bird conservation causes it represents.
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Jenna
Chenoweth, Membership Assistant is a
native of Colorado, and moved to Virginia very
early in life but visited Colorado on a regular
basis. Jenna is a Certified Master Dog Trainer,
and a Certified Groomer. Prior to joining ABC
Jenna worked for Navy Federal Credit Union in
a number of different financial and administrative
positions. She lives in Bealeton, Virginia with
her husband Kevin, daughter McKenna, and their
German Shepherd Greta.
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Dr.
Robert "Chip" Chipley, International
Program Director, took up his duties for ABC in
early November 1998. For over 20 years he worked
in various capacities with The Nature Conservancy's
Science Division in building the network of Heritage
Programs; his last position there was as Director
of Communications. By way of scientific background,
he has a Ph.D. from Cornell in biology, having
done his thesis work on the wintering biology
of the Blackburnian Warbler in Colombia. He retains
a keen interest in neotropical ornithology and
has also published on his research in the British
Virgin Islands.
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Karen
Imparato Cotton, Bird Collisions Campaign
Manager, joined ABC in February 2008 having spent
the last three years working on bird collision
issues (both as a volunteer and as a consultant)
with New York City Audubon and the Bird-Safe Glass
Foundation. She helped to convene the Bird-Safe
Glass Working Group, reviewed NYC Audubon's Bird-Safe
Building Guidelines, trained Project Safe Flight
volunteers, and developed grant proposals to fund
research for the creation of bird-safe glass.
Karen was born and raised in New York City, and
holds a Master of Urban Planning degree from New
York University Graduate School of Public Administration,
and a BA in psychology from NYU Washington Square
College of Arts and Sciences. She has lived in
Princeton, N.J. for the past 25 years where she
has been an active community advocate for wildlife
and open space, having served on many boards,
including the International Fund for Animal Welfare
and Friends of Princeton Open Space. She is an
amateur bird watcher who has been privileged to
view birds and other wildlife in many ecosystems
across the United States, as well as in Trinidad,
Botswana, South Africa and China.
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Rita
G. Fenwick, Vice President of Development,
received a B.A. from the University of Virginia
where she was a Latin American Studies Major.
From 1986 to 1992, Rita worked for the Virginia
Chapter of The Nature Conservancy where she filled
many roles including Director of Development and
Communications.
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Dr.
Jane A. Fitzgerald, Central Hardwoods
Joint Venture Coordinator, received her Ph. D.
in Zoology from the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville.
Her course work and research emphases were on
avian ecology and animal behavior. During the
early 1990's, Jane was a lecturer at Southwest
Missouri State University and the Mayor of Reeds
Spring, Missouri. From 1995-2000, she served as
Partners in Flight Midwest Regional Coordinator.
Jane is the founder and Director of a small not-for-profit
organization whose work includes monitoring bird
populations in a rapidly urbanizing region of
southwestern Missouri.
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Dr.
Michael Fry, Director, Conservation Advocacy,
is an avian toxicologist with research interests
in the effects of pollutants and pesticides on
ecosystems, with a focus on wild birds. He received
his doctorate at the University of California-Davis,
where he then went on to be a research physiologist
in the Department of Avian/Animal Sciences for
23 years before joining Stratus Consulting in
2003. Michael has been a panel member for the
National Academy of Sciences on hormone active
chemicals in the environment and has participated
in toxicology reviews and international symposia
for the Organization for Economic Cooperation
and Development (OECD) and for the United Nations
University in Japan. He has been a committee member
for EPA and OECD in revising avian toxicity test
methods and was a member of the EPA Ecological
Committee for Federal Insecticide, Fungicide,
and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) Risk Assessment Methods
(ECOFRAM).
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Jessica
Hardesty, Seabird Program Director, joined
ABC in Spring 2007 as she wrapped up her PhD in
Ecology at Duke with John Terborgh. She received
her BSc in Wildlife Biology from Humboldt State
University, and then spent a few years as a field
technician in the United States before heading
to Ecuador with the US Peace Corps. She conducted
her dissertation research in Venezuela, Peru,
and Ecuador, focusing on the ecology of birds
in Sangay National Park, Ecuador where she spent
a year as a Fulbright Scholar. In 2005, she worked
with ABC, WWF, CI, and TNC developing project
abstracts for Alliance for Zero Extinction sites.
Jessica now has 12 years of experience as a conservationist,
ecologist and social scientist, with a focus on
Latin America. She is fluent in Spanish and learning
Portuguese.
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Steve
Holmer, Director of Public Relations,
received a B.A. degree in history and a minor
degree in political science from Pennsylvania
State University and has over fifteen years experience
in communications and press on wildlife and forest
conservation issues. He comes to ABC from the
Unified Forest Defense Campaign, a coalition of
national organizations working on National Forest
issues. Previously he served as Campaign Coordinator
of American Lands Alliance and began his wildlife
conservation efforts on the Greenpeace Tropical
Forests campaign.
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Alicia
King, Director of Bird
Conservation Alliance joined ABC in August
2003. Alicia does songbird rehabilitation and
is a bird bander. She has worked as a naturalist
in Florida where she created and presented educational
programs. Alicia was the Education and Cause-
related Marketing Manager for a national bird
feeding retail franchise. She served on the Association
of Field Ornithologists council and Operation
Migration. She served as a host on the BirdWatch
television program for Public Broadcasting Service
(PBS) and she hosted the Bird Feature segment
on Discover the Wild for Wyoming PBS. Alicia created
and regularly appeared as the host on television
program For the Birds for the Indianapolis CBS
affiliate. Alicia currently serves on the board
the Ornithological Council and the American Ornithologists
Union Committee on Conservation. She is the author
of the Orvis Beginners Guide to Birdwatching book.
Alicia lectures and presents workshops to all
age groups on bird identification, conservation
issues, habitat creation, Eastern Partnership
Whooping Crane Reintroduction and organizational
workshops such as Gaining Publicity, Volunteer
Acquisition and Retention, and Organizing a Conservation
Campaign. She lives with her husband and their
children in the Washington DC area.
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Dan
Lambert, Northeast Bird Monitoring Coordinator,
joined ABC in 2006 after seven years as a Conservation
Biologist at the Vermont Institute of Natural
Science. He holds a BA in Environmental Education
from Dartmouth College and an MS in Ecology from
the University of Alberta. Dan works from an office
at the Vermont Center for Ecostudies (VCE) and
travels throughout the Northeast building tools
and partnerships for coordinated bird monitoring.
As a research associate at VCE, he also leads
a collaborative effort to monitor and conserve
mountain birds in the region.
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Dr.
Edward J. "Ed" Laurent, Science
Coordinator for the Bird Conservation Institute
received a Ph.D. from the Department of Fisheries
and Wildlife at Michigan State University. His
dissertation focused on incorporating satellite
imagery into analysis of bird species distribution
patterns across forested landscapes. Prior to
joining ABC, he was a keeper for several zoos,
managed a live trapping and relocation company
in Georgia, studied water snakes for his MS degree,
and was a postdoctoral research associate with
the Southeast Gap Analysis Project. Over the past
decade Dr. Laurent has focused on expanding the
role of GIS, remote sensing and database technologies
in natural resource management and has published
on these methods in both the scientific and technical
literature. He is also an active member of NC
and Southeast Partners in Flight.
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Anne
Law, Deputy Director of Conservation
Advocacy, has broad experience in legislative
affairs, law, and politics. Prior to joining ABC,
Anne worked for Rapoza Associates, a public interest
lobbying and government relations firm located
in Washington, DC. At Rapoza, Anne secured federal
appropriations for housing and community development
organizations and worked to establish a micro-lending
program at the USDA. As a legislative assistant
for Audubon, Anne helped secure federal appropriations
for Audubon nature centers and worked on the campaign
to save the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge from
drilling. On the legal front, Anne worked for
a private firm where she focused on class action
lawsuits and federal investigations. Anne has
also worked on federal compliance issues for Hillary
Clinton's Senate campaign in 2000 and as a field
organizer for John Kerry's Presidential campaign
in 2004. Anne has a Bachelor's degree in business
administration from Cornell University and JD
from The Columbus School of Law at Catholic University.
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Dr.
Daniel J. Lebbin, Conservation Biologist,
received a B.A. degree in Biology and Environmental
Science & Policy from Duke University, and
a Ph.D. in Ecology & Evolutionary Biology
from Cornell University. His dissertation research
investigated habitat specialization among Amazonian
birds in Peru, where he spent a year as a Fulbright
Scholar. Daniel did work for WWF, TNC, the National
Zoo, and field research projects in Jamaica, Costa
Rica, Ecuador, and Venezuela. He speaks Spanish
and is learning Portuguese. A birder since childhood,
Daniel also enjoys bird illustration and photography,
and his images appear in a variety of publications
and exhibits.
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Mary
Liles, Program Development Officer, is
a seventh generation Washingtonian. After graduation
from The George Washington University with a degree
in history, she worked in international policy
and project development for American labor unions
for nineteen years. With her husband and son,
she recently relocated to Piedmont Virginia to
enjoy the natural beauty of the area, and to learn
more about conservation. In her spare time, she
enjoys hiking, needlepoint, antiquing, and being
a novice birder.
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Casey
Lott, Coastal and Waterways Program Coordinator,
has diverse ornithological experience working
with passerines, seabirds, and raptors. He has
researched landbird stopover ecology and the use
of stable isotopes to track animal movements.
He has participated in conservation programs monitoring
raptor populations and decreasing bird collisions
with towers on migration routes. He also directs
a long-term raptor migration research and environmental
education project in the Florida Keys for HawkWatch
International.
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Merrie
S. Morrison, Vice-President for Operations,
served as Director of Administration for the Virginia
Chapter of The Nature Conservancy from 1988 until
1995 when she joined ABC. She was the recipient
of the 2003 Partners in Flight National Outreach
Award.
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Michael
J. Parr, Vice President, graduated from
the University of East Anglia, U.K., in 1986.
He worked at the International Council for Bird
Preservation International Secretariat (now BirdLife
International) as Development Officer before joining
American Bird Conservancy in 1996. His first book,
Parrots - A Guide to the Parrots of the World
was published by Yale University Press in April
1998. He is a co-author of two further books:
Important Bird Areas in the U.S., and
Wildlife Spectacles, a Conservation International/Cemex
publication. He is also a member of the Advisory
Committee of ProAves Colombia, and acts as Chair
to the Alliance for Zero Extinction.
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Dr.
David N. Pashley, Vice President of Conservation
Programs, received a Ph.D. from the School of
Forestry, Wildlife and Fisheries at Louisiana
State University. His dissertation title was ‘A
Distributional Analysis of the Warblers of the
West Indies’. In addition to being an instructor
at the University of Southwestern Louisiana and
serving six years in the Science and Stewardship
programs of The Nature Conservancy, Dr. Pashley
has had a long association with Partners in Flight.
Among his responsibilities for PIF have been Chair
of the Southeast Working Group and National Coordinator.
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Gemma
Radko, Communications and Media Manager,
graduated from Allegheny College in 1985 with
a degree in Art and Biology. She has over 20 years
of graphic design experience and is also an avid
birder. She is a member of both the Montgomery
and Frederick chapters of the Maryland Ornithological
Society and often leads field trips for members.
Gemma is a licensed bird bander and runs a MAPS
(Monitoring Avian Productivity and Survivorship)
station during summers. She is also involved in
the Maryland/DC Breeding Bird Atlas Project, which
runs through 2006.
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Arturo
Restrepo, Carbon Finance Coordinator,
received a Bachelor of Science degree in Ecology
from Universidad Javeriana in Bogota, Colombia.
He also received a Master of Environmental Science
and Technology from UNESCO-IHE in Delft, The Netherlands
studying the use of remote sensing and geographic
information systems on landscape dynamics, forest
fragmentation and their relation to socio-economic
history and biophysical attributes in the Colombian
highlands. Since graduate school, Arturo has been
involved in Carbon projects focused on Neotropical
land-use changes. As a native of Colombia, Arturo
honed his interest in wildlife while trekking
along with his father through the tropical montane
cloud forests of the indigenous Muiscas
in Choachi. He is also a coffee grower by family
tradition. More recently, Arturo was one of the
lead scientists for the Inter-American Biodiversity
Information Network, with the Organization of
American States (OAS). Prior to joining ABC, Arturo
occupied the position of Ecological Informatics
Coordinator, at NASA's Global Change Data
Center in Goddard Space Flight Center.
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Stacy
Sanitra, Grants and Finance Administrator,
has a Bachelor's degree in Business Management
from George Mason University. She comes to ABC
after working with Air Serv International, a non-profit
humanitarian organization. While with Air Serv,
Stacy was responsible for administering US AID
and UN grants. She has experience with monitoring
performance and compliance with federal regulations.
Stacy has also worked as a Project Controller
for a federal contractor where she oversaw contracts
with the EPA. Stacy and her family live outside
of Warrenton, Virginia.
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Darin
Schroeder, Vice President of Conservation
Advocacy, brings nearly 13 years of extensive
Capitol Hill experience to ABC, having served
as Wisconsin Offices Manager for U.S. Senator
Russ Feingold (D-WI) from 1993 until 2000, and
then joining the staff of U.S. Congressman Ron
Kind (D-WI) as Press Secretary. Over the course
of the next six years, Darin went on to become
Representative Kind’s Communications Director
and Senior Policy Advisor. He played an instrumental
role in expanding voluntary conservation programs
in the 2002 Farm bill and worked closely with
ABC staff to introduce legislation reauthorizing
the Neotropical Migratory Bird Conservation Act.
Darin brings strong experience in lobbying, coalition
building, media, as well as general political
savvy to ABC. Darin received a Bachelors of Arts
degree from the University of Wisconsin in 1993.
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Gavin
Shire, Director of Communication, obtained
a bachelor's degree in Zoology & Genetics
from Sheffield University. He began his career
in bird conservation on the island of Mauritius,
where he was part of the restoration effort for
the Mauritius Kestrel, once the world's rarest
bird. He conducted two years of field research
and captive rearing/release work before coming
to America in 1992. He developed the Trumpeter
Swan Restoration Project for Environmental Studies
at Airlie, aimed at restoring migratory populations
of swans to the eastern United States using ultralight
aircraft. Here he was project coordinator, outreach
specialist, aviculturalist and ultralight pilot.
He joined ABC in March 2000. He has also worked
as a free-lance photographer.
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Lindsay
Shumate, Campaign Coordinator, originally
from Michigan, Lindsay graduated from Gordon College
in Massachusetts with a degree in Communications
and a concentration in Outdoor Education. She
spent a semester abroad backpacking and sea kayaking
in Baja California where she received her certification
with the Wilderness Education Association. Upon
marrying, Lindsay moved to The Plains, Virginia
where she and her husband currently live. In her
spare time, Lindsay enjoys doing outdoor activities
with family and friends.
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Brian
Smith, Appalachian Mountains Joint Venture
Coordinator, has worked for the Kentucky Department
of Fish & Wildlife Resources (KDFWR) since
2002, serving as their Small Game/Farm Bill Program
Coordinator and most recently as their Wildlife
Diversity Program Coordinator. Prior to working
for KDFWR, he earned a B.S. in Wildlife Management
from Eastern Kentucky University, an M.S. in Raptor
Biology from Boise State University (Burrowing
Owl research), and a Ph.D. in Forest Resource
Science from West Virginia University (Ruffed
Grouse research for the Appalachian Cooperative
Grouse Research Project).
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Judy
Szczepaniak, Office Administrator, The
Plains Office, has degrees in History and Art
History from Northern Illinois University and
a Humanities degree from Stephens College. Prior
to her relocation from Michigan to Virginia, she
was Office Administrator for Charter Industries
in Grand Rapids, MI. Outside of work, she enjoys
needlepoint, cartooning, and the best friendships
with her husband and their raggedy old newfoundland,
Duncan. Her knowledge of birds is only expandable.
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Beth
Wallace, Administration & Program
Assistant, received a Master of Science degree
in Zoology from the University of Otago in New
Zealand. Prior to joining ABC, Beth spent several
years as a field ornithologist, working for the
Missouri Department of Conservation and Bird Studies
Canada.
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Dr.
George E. Wallace, Vice President for
International Programs, has been active in bird
research and conservation for 20 years. Most recently,
George served as Executive Director of the Rocky
Mountain Bird Observatory, a close and long-standing
ABC partner. Prior to that, he worked for the
Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission
first as a Nongame Wildlife Biologist and then
as Florida’s state Bird Conservation Coordinator.
George has also worked for Bird Studies Canada,
The Nature Conservancy, Point Reyes Bird Observatory,
and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. George
received his M.S. in Zoology from the University
of Guelph in Ontario, Canada for his research
on plumage maturation and breeding behavior of
the Ruby-crowned Kinglet. He received his Ph.D.
in Biology at the University of Missouri where
his dissertation research focused on the wintering
ecology of Neotropical migrant and Cuban resident
birds overwintering on Cayo Coco, Cuba. George
has also worked on migration monitoring in Canada
and California, research on seabird breeding ecology
in California and Antarctica, and is an experienced
bird bander.
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Dr.
David A. Wiedenfeld, Assistant Director
of International Programs, received a Ph.D. from
Florida State University, and a M.S. from Louisiana
State University. His work has focused on bird
population ecology and conservation biology. He
has worked with CITES authorities on developing
methods for surveying psittacid populations and
evaluating the effects of the trade on the populations.
He served for five years as Director of Research
at the Sutton Avian Research Center, working primarily
on prairie-chickens. Returning to the Neotropics,
he served for more than three years as Head of
the Department of Vertebrate Ecology at the Charles
Darwin Research Station, in the Galapagos Islands.
His work there was primarily with bird populations,
but took also included projects on invasive species,
including predators, diseases, and parasites.
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Hana
Young, Administrative and Communications
Assistant, graduated from University of New Hampshire
with a degree in Communications and an minor in
English. She currently is taking classes in the
hopes of becoming fluent in American Sign Language.
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Dariusz
Zdziebkowski, IT and Website Coordinator
is an avid photographer, naturalist, and world
traveler in addition to keeping up to date with
the newest trends in the IT technology. Prior
to joining ABC, he spent few years managing his
own business Darweb Consulting, providing IT management
services to various small businesses and prior
to that managing all aspects of office infrastructure
and IT applications for a pharmaceutical association.
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