FAQ
   
 

brandon.jpgHawk Mountain Sanctuary Graduate Students

Are you a seriously committed graduate student thinking about working with birds of prey? If so, you may want to consider becoming a Hawk Mountain Sanctuary Graduate Student. The Sanctuary directs and supports the work of graduate students working in raptor Conservation Science globally.

Each year Hawk Mountain offers competitive grants to graduate students working on raptors at major universities throughout the United States and elsewhere.

Support is limited to areas of interest to Hawk Mountain Sanctuary, including the movement ecology, conservation status, and protection of birds of prey. Recent projects have involved studies of the flight behavior of long-distance raptor migrants in Panama, the conservation status of Turkey Vultures in the Falkland Islands, the migration behavior of Turkey Vultures in North, Central, and South America, and the movement ecology and flight behavior of five species of vultures in East Africa.

The Sanctuary's Acopian Center provides a model setting for library research, proposal writing, analyses of field observations, and thesis and dissertation write-ups.

For more Information: 
Potential applicants should contact Dr. Keith L. Bildstein at Bildstein@hawkmtn.org for information on how best to proceed.

Pictured:
Graduate Student Brandon Breen (Ph.D., University of Minnesota) is studying flight behavior, abundance and distribution, and movement and feeding ecology of a non-migratory popularion of Turkey Vultures on the Falkland Islands. Brandon's work is being supported by the Falklands Government, Edinburgh Zoo and Hawk Mountain Sanctuary.