Todd Katzner

Dr. Todd Katzner is Director of Conservation and Field Research at the National Aviary in Pittsburgh and is Adjunct Assistant Professor of Biology at the University of Pittsburgh and at Duquesne University. He received his B.A. in Biology from Oberlin College in 1991. He received his M.S. in Zoology and Physiology from the University of Wyoming, where he studied the winter ecology of pygmy rabbits. He received his Ph.D. in Biology in 2003 from Arizona State University, where he studied the ecology of a community of eagles at the Naurzum National Nature Reserve in north-central Kazakhstan. He received an NSF postdoctoral fellowship to study demography of eagles and vultures at Imperial College London. Todd has studied the ecology and demography of birds of prey since 1997. His work with raptors has focused on developing novel techniques for non-invasive demographic studies, especially focused on eagles and vultures, and on developing novel techniques for advanced, high-frequency telemetry systems for raptors. Most of his research has taken place in Eurasia (Kazakhstan, Georgia, Philippines) and North America. In addition to his research, Todd teaches at the University of Pittsburgh and at Duquesne University and he supervises three graduate students.

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Note: The above list is of recent works only. For a complete listing, reference Todd's full GRIN profile