News |
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| Matt Rayner, a PhD student in the lab has just received his PhD. The title of Matt's thesis was "Population biology, predator prey dynamics, foraging ecology, and conservation status of Pterodroma cookii" |
University of Auckland primatologist discovers new monkey in Amazon
"A primatologist at The University of Auckland has discovered a new species of monkey living in north-western Amazonia. Dr Jean Boubli, of the University’s Department of Anthropology, found the monkey while undertaking field work in the Aracá River, a left bank tributary of the Negro River, Amazonas, Brazil." [read the press release] |
Current SBS and former BayerBoost summer student Liz Fraser's morepork
research from Ark in the Park featured in today's NZ Herald: |
| PhD student Jeremy Corfield’s latest publication in Brain Behaviour and Evolution has attracted a lot of attention from the press. Articles on Jeremy’s work have appeared in the New Zealand Herald and the Christchurch Press. Jeremy was also interviewed on the Checkpoint programme, National Radio. |
PhD student Matt Rayner's upcoming paper in PNAS, on Cook's petrel conservation theory
and data, has been featured in the NZ Herald, New York Times, Conservation Magazine and other international and national news outlets this week. |
| Mark Hauber and his colleagues from the Czech Republic and United Kingdom have earned one of only 2 Human Frontiers Science programme grants awarded to New Zealand (the other was to Michael Walker and colleagues, also in SBS). The grant, worth over US$1 million, is entitled “The chemistry of visual trickery: evolution and mechanisms of egg mimicry in cuckoos”. Well done Mark. |
| Kate Lomas, who is currently completing her MSc research on the hearing ability and anti-pradator behaviour of weta, has won a prestigious scholarship to study under Prof David Yager at the University of Maryland. Kate will be learning the latest neurological recording techniques in Prof Yager’s lab with the intention of beginning a PhD in the EAB lab in 2007. Congratulations to Kate. |
| Kerry Borkin has won a Bat Conservation International Scholarship to support her PhD research on Chalinolobus tuberculatus in Kinleath pine forest. Kerry’s work focuses on the use of the commercial pine forest by Chalinolobus, including habitat preference and roost site selection, and the effect of logging operations on the bats |
| ake a look at our new gallery page. it contains links to images, movies, and sounds highlighting our work. |
| Andrea Dekrout has won the best student oral presentation at the Australasian Bat Research Conference held recently in Auckland. Andrea’s talk was entitled “One sex in the city? Early indications of an extreme sex bias in the use of city habitats in Hamilton New Zealand and the ecology of long-tailed bats (Chalinolobus tuberculatus) at an urban-rural interface”. |