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4-Poster Tick Study
Animal Threats and Diseases
Deer Management
Extension
NE WDM Co-Op
Publications
Suburban Coyote
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Skip navigation links
4-Poster Tick Study
Animal Threats and Diseases
Deer Management
Extension
NE WDM Co-Op
Publications
Suburban Coyote
Project Description
Research Team
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Research Team 
 

Dr. Dan Decker, professor of human dimensions of wildlife management and co-leader of the Human Dimensions Research Unit in the department of natural resources at Cornell University, has studied the human attitudinal and behavior aspects of wildlife management for over 30 years.   He is co-principal investigator on the New York Suburban Coyote Project.

Dr. Paul Curtis has coordinated the Wildlife Damage Management Program for Cornell Cooperative Extension during the past 15 years.  His research interests include wildlife damage management in urban and agricultural landscapes, wildlife fertility control, and resolving community-based wildlife issues.  Extension programming has included public policy education and a variety of wildlife-related publications and videotapes.  Dr. Curtis is serving as a co-principal investigator for the portion of the study concerning coyote behavioral ecology.

Heather Wieczorek Hudenko is a graduate student with the Human Dimensions Research Unit at Cornell University.  Her research interests include human-wildlife interactions and wildlife management.

William F. (Bill) Siemer is a Research Specialist and Ph.D. candidate with the Human Dimensions Research Unit at Cornell University.  His research interests relate to understanding wildlife management stakeholders and improving stakeholder engagement processes.

Daniel Bogan is a PhD student at Cornell University. He received his B.S. in Environmental and Forest Biology from SUNY Environmental Science and Forestry and an M.S. in Biology from SUNY University at Albany. He has studied suburb-dwelling coyotes and other carnivores since 2001. His research interests include behavioral and spatial ecology, wildlife demographics, and geographic information systems. 

Jim Dreisacker Jim Dreisacker, the President and owner of Westchester Wildlife, founded the company in 1982. He is an experienced wildlife control professional, licensed in New York and Connecticut. He has been cited in articles of major publications, including the New York Times and PCT Magazine. He has also been a guest of television and radio programs as well as an invited speaker at numerous state wildlife association seminars, including NTSWMA, NJWDC, and the Wildlife Society, Northeast Student Conclave. He is presently working on a New York State suburban coyote study with Cornell University.
Neil Tregger Neil Tregger is a recent graduate from SUNY Cobleskill with a Bachelor’s Degree in Wildlife Management. He began his career as an intern studying elk. By the use of GPS Telemetry, he monitored the movements and survival rates of elk within the Badlands of North Dakota. Also, he worked for Cornell University for a year. He has experience trapping coyotes and mounting radio collars on them in order to study their movements and behaviors as a nuisance study in Westchester County, NY. Currently, he is a Nuisance Wildlife Control Operator working for Westchester Wildlife Control.