Giselle Elena Muschett Rivera
Post-Doc
Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso
Curauma, Chile
Behavioural ecology, pollinator-plant interactions, wildlife conservation and management, biodiversity, entomology, taxonomy
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Biology, Macquarie University, Sydney. Australia, 2017
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Natural Resrouces, PONTIFICIA UNIVERSIDAD CATOLICA DE CHILE. Chile, 2008
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Zoology, UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA. Estados Unidos, 1998
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Post-Doc Full Time
PONTIFICIA UNIVERSIDAD CATOLICA DE VALPARAISO
Ciencias
Valparaíso, Chile
2019 - 2020
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Tutor Part Time
MACQUARIE UNIVERSITY
Science and Engineering
Sydney, Australia
2014 - 2015
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Profesor Part Time
Universidad Católica Santa María la Antigua
Engineering
Panamá, Panamá
2009 - 2010
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Post-Doc Full Time
Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso
Valparaíso, Chile
2019 - At present
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Tutor Part Time
Macquarie University
Sydney, Australia
2014 - 2015
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Wildlife Manager Full Time
Autoridad Aeronáutica Civil de Panamá
Panamá, Panamá
2016 - 2018
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International Research Developer Part Time
University of Auckland
Auckland, Nueva Zelanda
2010 - 2013
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Director Full Time
Smithsonian Foundation of Panama
Panamá, Panamá
2008 - 2010
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Biologist Full Time
National Association for the Conservation of Nature
Panamá, Chile
1998 - 2006
Teaching Assistant in Animal Behaviour and Molecular Biology.
Teacher in Ecology at the Universidad Católica Santa María La Antigua of Panama.
Coordinating conservation workshops with local communities and government agencies, as well as presenting results to Funding agencies.
Environmental education and experimental design taught to local communities and government agencies.
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Rufford Small Grants for Nature Conservation
Rufford Foundation
Reino Unido, 2007
The West Indian Manatee (Trichechus manatus) has been little studied in Panama. It is considered an endangered species by the World Conservation Union (IUCN) and the Convention on the International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), and as such any and all existent populations of manatee are of great importance to the species’ survival. In 1964, nine West Indian manatees (T. manatus) from the Caribbean province of Bocas del Toro and one Amazonian manatee (T. inunguis) from Peru were relocated to the Lake Gatun in the Panama Canal Watershed by the former Panama Canal Commission. They were part of a program to help control aquatic vegetation in the lake, but the program was abandoned some four years later. The manatees were left in the lake, and have since begun to reproduce. In 1982 the manatee population in the lake was estimated in 25 individuals, but this was a rough estimate, and there is no current data. There are also unconfirmed reports that local communities still hunt the manatee as a source of protein, but there have been no more studies carried out on this species in the country. This manatee population is assumed to be highly inbred and possibly contain hybrids of the two species (T. manatus and T. inguis). The current conservation status of this population and the current threats to its survival remain unknown. This project will study the abundance, habitat use and conservation status of the manatees in the lake through interviews, direct (aerial/boat) surveys, and genetic analysis. The genetic analysis will help determine the relationship to the manatee population in Bocas del Toro, which popular belief considered the only source of manatees in the lake. However, there are reports of manatees in the Chagres river, prior to its enclosure for the creation of lake Gatun and the Panama Canal. It is quite possible that several of these manatees survived the construction period of the Canal and have intermingled with the introduced manatees to create a viable and stable population. These results will be the first for this unique manatee population. The results come at a crucial moment, given the upcoming Canal expansion
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ABRS Scholarship
Australia Biologial Research Study
Australia, 2012
Taxonomic review of the Australian alpine grasshopper genus Kosciuscola
An Illustrated Field Guide to the Birds of Panama |