Inquiry at the Intersection of Wilderness and Human Civilization
The California Condor
Buffalo Restoration on Tribal Lands
Wild Foods and West Virginia Foodways
Rural Rajasthan, India
Publications
Hall, J.C., Gum, H., and Pietkoski, K. (2020). Wild alternatives: accounting for and rethinking the relationship between wild game and food security in Appalachian food systems. Applied Geography. https:/doi.org/10.1016/j.apgeog.2020.102329
Hall, J.C., Braham, M.A., Nolan, L.A., Conley, J., Brandt, J., Mendenhall, L., Lanzone, M., McGann, A., and Katzner, T.E. (2019). Spatio-temporal dynamics of ground foraging ecology of California condors (Gymnogyps californianus) in the human-dominated landscape of Southern California. Wilson Journal of Ornithology 131(3).
Poessel, S.A., Duerr, A.E., Hall, J.C., Braham, M.A., and Katzner, T.E. (2018). Improving estimation of flight altitude in wildlife telemetry studies. Journal of Applied Ecology. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.13135
Hall, J.C., Chhangani, A.K., and Warner, T.A. (2015) Spatial characteristics of nest sites of critically endangered Indian vultures (Gyps indicus) in Rajasthan, India. Indian Forester 141(10): 1079-1083.
Hall, J.C. and Chhangani, A.K. (2015) Cultural tradition and wildlife conservation in the human-dominated landscape of rural Western Rajasthan, India. Indian Forester 141(10): 1011-1019.
Presentations (2020)
Wildlife Geography in the Anthropocene. Rutgers University Colloquium, New Brunswick, NJ
California Condor Movement Ecology. Utah State University Ecology Center Seminar Series, Logan, UT
Collaborators
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Foundation
Dr. Anil K. Chhangani, Maharaja Ganga Singh University
Our Funders
The National Fish and Wildlife Foundation
National Geographic
West Virginia University