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Last updated: October 11, 2002
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How is restoration improved by research on alligators and crocodiles?
Biographies
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Frank J. Mazzotti
Frank J. Mazzotti is an Associate Professor
of Wildlife Ecology in the Department of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation,
Everglades Research and Education Center, University of Florida. He has
over 25 years experience researching and teaching issues relating to wildlife
and their habitats in South Florida. A major focus of Dr. Mazzotti's research
and education programs has been evaluating the effects of human activities
on crocodilians and their habitats.
Dr. Mazzotti has conducted field
research projects for several agencies including USNPS, USCOE, USDOE, USFWS,
FDOT, SFWMD, Broward County and Florida Power and Light Company. In addition
to crocodilian research, monitoring and modeling, recent projects have
involved integrating cross taxa wildlife sampling, vegetation sampling
and GIS based species habitat modeling to assess effects of human activities
on ecosystem integrity and to form the basis for management decisions.
Current projects focus on developing long term, science based, GIS/GPS
integrated, research and monitoring programs to evaluate ecosystem restoration
and management efforts in South Florida. |
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Kenneth G. Rice
Kenneth G. Rice is a wildlife biologist
with USGS-Biological Resources Division, Florida Caribbean Science Center,
Restoration Ecology Branch based in Homestead, Florida. The primary focus
of his current research concerns the population ecology of the American
alligator in southern Florida as it relates to restoration of the Everglades
Ecosystem.
Dr. Rice has been involved in cooperative
research with many agencies and other organizations including the University
of Florida, University of Georgia, USNPS, USFWS, USEPA, SJWMD, FLGFWFC,
GADNR, and the government of Ecuador. His past research has involved crocodilian
research and management, wildlife monitoring and population modeling.
Currently, he is using radio-telemetry
and population modeling to address questions concerning alligator population
dynamics and restoration. |
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H. Franklin Percival
Dr. H. Franklin Percival is Unit Leader
of the Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, USGS-Biological
Resources Division and Associate Courtesy Professor in the Department of
Wildlife Ecology and Conservation, University of Florida. He has worked
for the US Fish and Wildlife Service and USGS-BRD as a wildlife research
biologist in Washington, DC; Laurel, MD; and Gainesville, FL for 26 years.
His principal research interests lie in wetlands wildlife, particularly
waterfowl and alligators. He has conducted long term cooperative projects
on various aspects of alligator biology and the concept of ranching crocodilians.
Current projects include impacts of
contaminants and other factors on alligator populations in severely polluted
lakes in north central Florida and movements, habitat use and thermoregulation
of alligators in the Everglades. He also has a special interest in administration
within the wildlife profession and champions multi disciplinary and interagency
research programs. |
Laura Brandt and Frank Mazzotti conducting an alligator survey
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Laura A. Brandt
Laura A. Brandt has been working in South
Florida since 1983. She has worked on projects examining individual species
population dynamics, distribution of vertebrate species in relation to
habitats, mapping of vegetation using GIS, modeling current and predicted
future species distribution on a landscape scale, and analysis of landscape
patterns.
Dr. Brandt has been involved both as
a researcher and coordinator in large scale multi-disciplinary research
involving agencies such as SFWMD, USFWS, FGFWFC, USCOE, and USGS-BRD.
Her research has included work on population dynamics of alligators and
crocodiles, patterns of landscape change in relation to agricultural development
and water management, and the spatial patterns and ecological role of alligator
holes and tree islands in the Everglades. Dr. Brandt is currently the
Lead Wildlife Biologist at A.R.M. Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge.
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Graduate Students
Mark Campbell holding hatchling
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Mark Campbell
After receiving his baccalaureate degree
in Biology at Muhlenberg College, Mark worked as an analyst with an environmental
testing company in south Florida. He then began part-time work with Florida
Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission where he learned about the Everglades
and its wildlife. In pursuit of addition schooling he met Dr. Frank Mazzotti
by volunteering to assist with a state-wide vegetation mapping effort at
the University of Florida. Shortly after, Dr. Mazzotti offered Mark an
opportunity to conduct a study on Everglades Alligator Holes while supporting
his graduate research. Mark now looks forward to a exciting and challenging
career in natural resource management and research, and plans to investigate
natural systems of Colorado.
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Mike Cherkiss and Julie Pennington measuring
a crocodile |
Michael Cherkiss
Michael Cherkiss attended the University
of Florida as an undergraduate. While there he learned and practiced a
variety of sampling techniques for surveying for wildlife. In addition,
he worked as a field technician on a Kemps Ridley Sea Turtle radio tracking
and habitat use project, based out of Cedar Key, FL. He later earned a
Bachelor of Science degree in Wildlife Ecology in 1996. Continuing his
education under Frank Mazzotti within the department of Wildlife Ecology
and Conservation as a master's candidate, he will graduate this summer
with a Master of Science degree "Status and Distribution of the American
Crocodile in Southeastern Florida". Michael intends to put both his educational
and field experience to use while pursuing a career in the field of wildlife
ecology and management. Email: Mcherkiss@aol.com. |
| Stan Howarter
Stanley R. Howarter received a B. S. in
Wildlife Management from Humboldt State University in the redwoods of northern
California in 1996. While living in northern California he worked for
two summers as a field biologist conducting surveys for marbled murrelets
(an endangered seabird which nests in old growth forests) and point counts
for forest birds. Determined to work with alligators, he moved to Florida
in the fall of 1996. He quickly found a position with the Florida Cooperative
Fish and Wildlife Research Unit studying alligators in the Everglades which
led to a graduate assistantship at the University of Florida. Stan is
now finishing up his M.S. in Wildlife Ecology and Conservation and hopes
to continue working with crocodilians after graduation. |
Stan Howarter using a
boat mounted null
combiner antennae to
locate an alligator
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| Cory Morea
Cory Morea attended the University of Florida
and earned a Bachelor of Science degree in Wildlife Ecology with a minor
in Forestry in 1996. He was employed by the Department of Wildlife Ecology
and Conservation, University of Florida during the summer of 1996 studying
species composition in wetland habitats associated with Orange Lake, Florida.
In October 1996, he was hired by the Florida Cooperative Fish and Wildlife
Research Unit as a field technician to work on an American alligator project
in the Everglades and became a graduate student on the same project in
the fall of 1997. He will graduate this summer with a Master of Science
degree "Home Range, Movement, And Habitat Use Of The American Alligator
In The Everglades". |
Stan Howarter and Cory Morea
with tracked gator
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| Michelle Palmer
Michelle Palmer grew up in South Florida,
and despite the urban sprawl of her environment, she developed an appreciation
for nature and wildlife. After graduating from Coral Springs High School,
Michelle decided to leave South Florida to pursue a college education in
a different habitat. This led her to the University of Rochester in upstate
New York, where she majored in Ecology and Evolutionary biology. After
receiving her degree in 1995, Michelle once again found herself in South
Florida, although this time she was a far removed from the urban sprawl
as she participated in an internship in the wilds of the Everglades. While
working for a wildlife biologist in Everglades National Park, her employer
put her in touch with Dr. Frank J. Mazzotti who was looking for graduate
students to work on a ecological study of Everglades alligator holes.
This leads Michelle to the present, where she is diligently writing her
thesis at the University of Florida in Gainesville. |
Matthew Chopp and Michelle
Palmer measuring an alligator
hole in WCA 3A
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| Field Technicians
Jay Anderson
Matthew D. Chopp
Phillip J. George
Anna Liner
Julie Pennington
Marina Rivieccio
Travis Tuten
Chad Westall
Paige Ziemba |
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Collaborators and Cooperators
Clarence Abercrombie, Wofford
College
Alligator Management Section,
GFC
Sonny Bass, National Park
Service
Paul Cardeilhac, University
of Florida
Tim Gross, USGS - BRD
Lindsey Hord, GFC
Paul Moler, GFC
Paul Richards, University
of Miami
Skip Snow, National Park
Service
Joe Wasilewski, FPL/Quantum
Allen Woodward, GFC |
Support and Funding
Everglades Agricultural Area
Environmental Protection
District
Florida Game and Fresh Water
Fish Commission
Florida Power & Light
National Fish and Wildlife
Foundation
South Florida Water Management
District
US Army Corps of Engineers
US Department of the Interior,
National Park Service
US Environmental Protection
Agency
US Geological Survey
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Acknowledgements
Alligator and crocodile provided
by Joe Wasilewski, Natural Selections.
Graphic design by Mary Hudson
Kelley, University of Florida. |
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