Center for Collaborative Conservation awards Fellows
Colorado State University's Center for Collaborative Conservation awarded 17 fellowships as part of the center's fellows program that strengthens engagement among students, faculty and conservation practitioners by promoting collaborative research, education and action on critical conservation issues both locally and around the globe. The fellowships are 18-month appointments.
Sarah Maisonneuve
Maisonneuve is a doctorate student in the Graduate Degree Program in Ecology at Colorado State University, working with Mike Coughenour, studying the conflict between humans and elephants outside Ruaha National Park, Tanzania. The aims of her research are to characterize and distinguish the areas where elephants leave protected area to raid farms and those where they do not, to determine whether their movements may be predicted by landscape quality, proximity to the protected area or proximity to known corridors. This fellowship will allow her to share her research findings with local Tanzanians who are most affected by this conflict. She will produce films, radio programs and written reports in both Kiswahili and English, which include general information about elephants, a description of the research project and its main conclusions and methods to mitigate human-elephant conflict in the area.
Joana Roque de Pinho
Roque de Pinho is a doctorate student in the Graduate Degree Program in Ecology at Colorado State University, working with Kathy Galvin. Her doctorate research explores the coexistence of Kenyan Maasai pastoralists and wildlife from cultural, cognitive and economic perspectives. During her fellowship, she will return to her field site in the Amboseli ecosystem to share her research results with the three communities she worked with, and carry out a participatory photography exercise through which local participants will express how they perceive their coexistence with wildlife, as well as a community workshop to share these findings with policy-makers. She will also explore the possibility to involve local Christian pastors as partners in collaborative conservation. The fellowship products will include an exhibit of the photographs and associated stories and a film that will document the steps of this collaborative process.
Heidi Steltzer
Steltzer is a research scientist in the Natural Resource Ecology Laboratory at Colorado State University, whose research is assessing the biological consequences of earlier snowmelt from desert dust deposition in alpine landscapes. For her fellowship, Steltzer will collaborate with the Mountain Studies Institute from Silverton, Colo. to create visualizations of the seasonality of Rocky Mountain alpine landscapes in the year 2020, if desert dust deposition remains high. These visualizations will take several forms, including photos, a slide show and a film, and will fulfill a stakeholder recommendation on an approach to communicate scientific results to stakeholders from a stakeholder-scientist conference on climate change in the San Juan Mountains that was hosted by the Mountain Studies Institute.
External Link (Today@Colorado State)