After a very long field season, long hours of data
collection our students finally wrap up their findings and got ready to share
them with the RMBL community. After struggling with their presentations they came up
with amazing and really professional power points to present their remarkable results
in the Student Symposium.
Dakota McCoy and Vanessa Alejandro
Cody and Vanessa where always seen walking at very slow pace
towards each one of the marmots in our population to evaluate the presence of
personality traits and behavioral syndromes in our population.
Lawrance Chung
Functional relationships between early play behavior and
adult dominance roles
After sorting feces in the lab at UCLA, and doing an honors project looking at behavioral symmetries, Lawrance joined us in the field! Here he has been doing observations
and collecting behavioral data, in order to explore functions of pup play behavior.
Alexandra Hettena
Do mule deer respond to the sounds of their predators?
All the deer saw her first when Alex was approaching them to
study their responses to predators calls while they were foraging. Who said
that deer are not alert while foraging? After long journeys of field work, Alex
was able to find that deer can tell apart calls that come from different
predators.
Ellen Bledsoe
What is the sound of fear? Behavioral responses of
white-crowned sparrows (Zonotrichia
leucoprys) to synthesized stimuli with nonlinear phenomena
Ellen worked hard and collected all the data she needed; but
everything in science is not quite straight forward, and Ellen had to face this
problem early in her career in science. Quite lucky, Ellen could handle it and
was able to identify interesting responses of birds around RMBL to synthesized nonlinear sounds.
EDWIN GIOVANI SAN JOSÈ PINULA, GUATEMALA, GUATEMALA,
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