Edward Andrews | | (retired) Associate Professor, B.Sc., B.Ed., M.Sc. (Memorial) Office: RECPLEX Phone: (709) 637-6200 ext 6471 Email: eandrews@grenfell.mun.ca
Areas of Interests: Vertebrate/Invertebrate Biology |  |
Lois Bateman | | (retired) Associate Professor, B.Sc.(Hons) (Dalhousie), M.Sc. (Memorial) Office: RECPLEX Phone: (709) 637-6247 Email: lbateman@grenfell.mun.ca
Areas of Interests: Invertebrate Biology, Tardigrades of Newfoundland and Labrador |  |
Cheryl Butt | | Instructional Assistant Office: AS224 Phone: (709) 637-6200 ext 6339 Email: cbutt@grenfell.mun.ca
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Christine Campbell | | (Freshwater Ecology) B.Sc. British Columbia, M.Sc. Alberta, Ph.D. Memorial Office: AS3024 Phone: (709) 637-6200 ext 6478 Email: ccampbell@grenfell.mun.ca Website: http://www.swgc.mun.ca/~ccampbel/campbell.html Areas of Interests: Freshwater ecology (limnology) and water quality issues, specifically the structure of zooplankton communities in natural and human-impacted freshwater systems in Newfoundland and Labrador, with current emphasis on fjord-type lakes on the west coast. |  |
Erin Fraser | | Assistant Professor, B.Sc. University of Toronto; M.Sc., Ph.D. University of Western Ontario Office: AS212 Phone: 639-2554 Email: efraser@grenfell.mun.ca
Areas of Interests: I am a vertebrate biologist and my research focuses on bat biology. I am particularly interested in aspects of bat echolocation and migration. Currently, I am investigating the use of endogenous markers to study bat movements. |  |
Dmitry Sveshnikov | | Assistant Professor, M.Sc. (Moscow), Ph.D. (Kiel) Office: AS213 Phone: 637-6200 ext 6528 Email: dsveshnikov@grenfell.mun.ca
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Ian Warkentin | | Professor (Conservation Biology) B.Sc., Ph.D. Saskatchewan Office: AS215 Phone: (709) 637-6246 Email: ian.warkentin@grenfell.mun.ca Website: http://www2.swgc.mun.ca/~iwarkent/iwarkent.html Areas of Interests: I am interested in how the configuration and composition of landscapes influence the movement and population dynamics of forest birds. Most recently, I have been studying the ability of individuals to move through and utilize forested areas which have been modified through timber harvest as they seek out resources for the breeding and postfledging phases. As habitat is lost or degraded through human activities such as logging, the landscape becomes more fragmented, the capacity to move in search of critical resources is constrained, and species may disappear from these areas. |  |
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