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Allee Awards
About the Allee Award
Karen E. Mabry (2007)
Aaron Rundus (2006)
Christopher Leary (2005)
Emily Duval (2004)
Sarah Conditt Humfeld (2003)
Gail Patricelli (2002)
Daniel J. Mennill (2001)
Deborah Duffy (2000)
Sara E. Cahan (1999)
Mitchell B. Baker (1998)
Andrew T. Storfer (1997)
Previous Allee Awards
 
Founder's Award
About the Founder's Award
Bernard Brennan (2001)
Heather Heying (2000)
Daniel D. Wiegmann (1999)
Renee L. Robinette (1998)
Founder's Award Contact
 
Outstanding New Investigator Award
About the Outstanding New Investigator Award
Maydianne C.B. Andrade (2003)
Jeff Podos (2001)
Douglas P. Chivers/H. Kern Reeve (1998)
ONYIA Contact
 
Genesis Award
About the Genesis Award
Joyce M. Christensen & Jennifer J. Templeton (2003)
Nicole M. Gerlach (2002)
Patricia Eck et al. and
Vincent Formica et al.
(2001 co-winners)
Verónica Solares (2000)
Genesis Award Contact
 
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The W. C. Brown Distinguished Teaching Award
Robert Matthews (2002)
Katherine Wynne-Edwards (2001)
G. R. Michener (2000)
D. K. Candland (1999)
James L. Gould (1997)
Rudolf Jander (1996)
H. Jane Brockmann (1995)
 
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Animal Behavior Society
  

ABS Members in the News

Notices are added frequently, with links to articles in, for example, CNN, Nature, Science, NY Times, ABC News, BBC, Scientific American, and more! If you have a link to add, please contact the chair of the Public Affairs Committee.


ABSNews
Animal Behavior Society's News and Announcments
Academy of Arts and Sciences picks Emory scholars: Frans de Waal
Two Emory University scholars were chosen to be fellows of the American Academy of Arts&Sciences, a prestigious honor society and research center with some of the best minds around the world. Emory Provost Earl Lewis and Frans de Waal, director of Emory's * Living Links Center, are among 212 scholars, scientists and leaders named as fellows for 2008.

Top predator thrives in poison operation area
Top predator thrives in poison areas, study by E Fraser and M Hauber, University of Auckland, finds

Knocking out top predator may not save prey
Removing what appears to be a predator at the top of the food chain may not necessarily save an endangered prey, a study in New Zealand by MJ Rayner, ME Hauber, et al. in PNAS has shown.

Voyeurs put male fish off their ideal mate
Mating fish don't like an audience, it seems. When another male spies on them they change their mind about which female they prefer. The findings may alter the way we think about mate choice driving evolution, researchers say.

Yellowthroats show geographic variation in mate preferences
What makes an ideal man? For some women, it's a charming personality; others just want to see a nice set of abs. Things aren't quite so complicated in the rest of the animal kingdom. In most species, every female prizes the same trait in a male, whether it be bright plumage or a pretty song. So researchers have been surprised to discover that female yellowthroats don't always agree on what turns them on--a finding that may offer a window onto speciation.

Certified Animal Behaviorists Evaluate Vick Dogs
ASPCA-led Expert Behaviorists Provide Recommendations to USDA On Disposition of Dogs Seized in Michael Vick Case

Brainy Parrot Passes Away
He knew his colors and shapes, he learned more than 100 English words, and with his own brand of one-liners he established himself in television shows, scientific reports and news articles as perhaps the world’s most famous talking bird.But last week Alex, an African gray parrot, died, apparently of natural causes, said Dr. Irene Pepperberg, a comparative psychologist at Brandeis University and Harvard who studied and worked with the parrot for most of his life and published reports of his progress in scientific journals. The parrot was 31.http://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/10/science/10cnd-parrot.html

Outsourcing parenting
Radio New Zealand's Amelia Nurse discovers that cuckoos have something to teach us about outsourcing parenting. Dr. Mark Hauber's Marsden funded research on North American and New Zealand brood parasites has been featured on Radio New Zealand's Science Story on 11 Sept. 2007.To listen, click:http://podcast.radionz.co.nz/aft/aft-20070912-1547-Science_Story-064.mp3