Archive | Meet Our Scientists

VIDEO: Meet our Scientist Rachel Page. She studies frog-eating bats, and other animals, in Panama

VIDEO: Meet our Scientist Rachel Page. She studies frog-eating bats, and other animals, in Panama

Meet Rachel Page, a Smithsonian scientist in Panama who studies frog-eating bats (fringe-lipped bats), among other topics. Her current research focuses on learning and memory in neotropical bats, combining field studies with laboratory experiments to learn about predator cognition and its effects on the evolution of their prey. [...more]

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Video: Meet our scientist Meg Crofoot, primate researcher in Panama. Meg studies intergroup competition in white‐faced capuchin monkeys.

Video: Meet our scientist Meg Crofoot, primate researcher in Panama. Meg studies intergroup competition in white‐faced capuchin monkeys.

Meg studies intergroup competition in white‐faced capuchin monkeys by tracking them through radio telemetry collars and observing their behaviors. [...more]

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Video: Meet Our Scientist–Briana Pobiner, human origins researcher at the National Museum of Natural History

Video: Meet Our Scientist–Briana Pobiner, human origins researcher at the National Museum of Natural History

Digging up early human and animal remains from the field in Africa, performing examination and publishing research about her findings, then enticing and educating the public about the implications are all in a week's work for Briana Pobiner. [...more]

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Video: Community ecologist Sunshine Van Bael explains her work in Panama with leafcutting ants

Video: Community ecologist Sunshine Van Bael explains her work in Panama with leafcutting ants

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Video: Meet our Scientist: Brian Gratwicke, Amphibian Avenger

Video: Meet our Scientist: Brian Gratwicke, Amphibian Avenger

Join National Zoo Conservation Biologist Brian Gratwicke in his work to save Panama's amphibians from extinction. You can also catch up on his dispatches from the field on the Panamanian Amphibian Rescue and Conservation Project's blog: http://amphibianrescue.org/ [...more]

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Coral “whisperer” Mike Henley of the National Zoo explains how he cares for the Zoo’s living coral

Coral “whisperer” Mike Henley of the National Zoo explains how he cares for the Zoo’s living coral

How do you recreate the ocean in a box? National Zoo Keeper Mike Henley talks about how he cares for the aquatic invertebrates in the Zoo's collection and how the National Zoo is also working to preserve them in their native habitats. [...more]

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Meet Our Scientist: Forensic ornithologist Carla Dove explains bird-strike science

Meet Our Scientist: Forensic ornithologist Carla Dove explains bird-strike science

When birds and planes collide: Carla Dove, a forensic ornithologist at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History, talks about the work of the Smithsonian's Feather Identification Lab and its role in improving aviation safety. [...more]

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Video: Meet Our Scientist–Helen James dives into dormant Hawaiian volcanoes to find bird fossils

Video: Meet Our Scientist–Helen James dives into dormant Hawaiian volcanoes to find bird fossils

Smithsonian Scientist Helen James dives into dormant Hawaiian volcanoes to find bird fossils. Her work to identify these species (some new species, some extinct) helps us learn about the past--specifically, how humans might have caused the extinction of certain bird species. [...more]

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Meet our Scientists—Videos!

Science Spotlight

Scientists from the Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center have found that fledgling catbirds living in the suburbs are extremely vulnerable. Almost 80 percent are killed by predators before they reach adulthood. Nearly half of the deaths are connected to domestic cats. The team studied catbird nests in 3 suburban neighborhoods in Maryland: Spring Park, Opal Daniels Park, and Bethesda. Learn more about this 2011 study by clicking here. (Catbird photo by Gerhard Hofmann)

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