David M. Bird
DAVID M. BIRD is regarded as one of the world’s leading experts
on birds of prey and he is often consulted by governments, universities,
funding bodies, corporations, and the general public for his expertise. David
has served as President(and Vice-President twice) of the Raptor Research
Foundation Inc. (RRF), participated on numerous committees and organized
several RRF symposia, three of which had published proceedings. He was also
one of the editors on the original 1987 edition of this book. After obtaining
his M.Sc. in 1976 and being appointed as the curator of the Macdonald Raptor
Research Centre, David quickly completed his Ph.D. in 1978. As Director of
what is now called the Avian Science and Conservation Centre, David has
published over 150 scientific papers on birds of prey, supervised 37 graduate
students to completion, and is currently supervising nine. As a Full
Professor of Wildlife Biology, he teaches several courses in ornithology,
fish and wildlife management, scientific communication, and wildlife
conservation. David has served as Vice-President of the Society of Canadian
Ornithologists twice and is currently the President-Elect. He is an elected
Fellow of the American Ornithologists’ Union and an elected member
representing Canada on the prestigious International Ornithological
Committee. Over the last 30 years, David has given countless talks all over
North America and made innumerable radio and television appearances both in
Montreal and across Canada. He has written and co-edited seven books,
including City Critters: How to Live with Urban Wildlife, Bird’s Eye-View: A
Practical Compendium for Bird-Lovers, and The Bird Almanac: The Ultimate
Guide to Facts and Figures on the World’s Birds He is also a regular
columnist on birds for The Gazette of Montreal and Bird Watcher’s Digest
magazine. Throughout his career, David’s achievements have been recognized by
various awards for wildlife conservation, the latest being the Quebec
Education Award in 2007, the first ever given by Bird Protection Quebec.
KEITH L. BILDSTEIN is Sarkis Acopian Director of Conservation Science at Hawk
Mountain Sanctuary in Kempton, Pennsylvania, where he oversees the
Sanctuary’s conservation science and education programs, and coordinates the
activities of its graduate students, international interns, and visiting
scientists Bildstein received his B.S. in Biology at Muhlenberg College, in
Allentown, Pennsylvania, in 1972, and his Masters and Ph. D. in Zoology from
the Ohio State University, in Columbus, Ohio, in 1976 and 1978. He currently
is Adjunct Professor of Wildlife Biology at the State University of New
York-Syracuse. He was Visiting Assistant Professor of Biology at the College
of William and Mary, in Williamsburg, Virginia, in 1978, and Distinguished
Professor of Biology at Winthrop University in Rock Hill, South Carolina,
from 1978 to 1992. He is a Fellow of the American Ornithologists’ Union, and
has been President of the Wilson Ornithological Society and the Waterbird
Society, and Vice-president of the Raptor Research Foundation. Bildstein
edited the Wilson Bulletin, a quarterly journal of ornithology, from 1984
through 1987, and was a member of the editorial board of The Auk, the AOU’s
journal, in 1997–2000. He has helped organize the scientific programs of
seven national and seven international ornithological meetings. Bildstein has
authored or coauthored more than 100 papers in ecology and conservation,
including 40 on raptors. His books include White Ibis: wetland wanderer
(1993), The raptor migration watch-site manual (1995 [with Jorje Zalles]),
Raptor watch: a global directory of raptor migration sites (2000 [with Jorje
Zalles]), and Migrating raptors of the world: their ecology and
conservation (2006). His co-edited
works include Conservation Biology of Flamingos (2000), Hawkwatching in the
Americas (2001), and Neotropical Raptors (2007). Keith’s current research
involves the geography, ecology, and conservation of the world’s migratory
raptors; energy management in migrating raptors; the feeding and movement
ecology of New and Old World vultures; and the wintering, breeding, and
movement ecology of American Kestrels.
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