Buffalo Museum of Science - Science & Research

David J. Spiering
Ecologist
Buffalo Museum of Science
1020 Humboldt Parkway
Buffalo NY 14211-1293

Office: Tifft Nature Preserve
Phone: 825-6397 (Tifft)
Email: DSpiering@sciencebuff.org

 

  

Position Description
I will be developing an ecologically based management plan for the 264-acre Tifft Nature Preserve that incorporates management and restoration, as well as ecological and environmental research, educational programming and public enjoyment of the preserve.  I will actively conduct management and research to enhance wildlife habitat, control invasive species, and restore native plant communities on the preserve.  Management and research will be incorporated into educational programming for school children and the general public to encourage appreciation of the natural world and lifelong learning by all visitors.

Research Interests
My research interests include wildlife habitat relationships and management techniques for restoring and enhancing habitat, especially for nongame and rare species.  I have considerable experience working with reptiles and amphibians, but I enjoy working with all taxa from birds to insects to native plants.  I am also interested in control and management of invasive plants in grassland and forest communities.

Education
M.S. 2004, Graduate Degree Program in Ecology, Colorado State University
          Thesis: Wildlife use of snags in managed ponderosa pine stands in the Black Hills, South
          Dakota
B.S. 1999, Zoology, Conservation Biology, Environmental Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Experience
Natural Resource Specialist, Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, 2004 – 2007
          Assisted landowners with managing and protecting habitat for at-risk species on private lands
Research Assistant, USDA Forest Service Black Hills National Forest, 2002 – 2004
          Examined the use of snags by wildlife in managed stands of ponderosa pine
Graduate Teaching Assistant, Colorado State University, 2002 – 2003
          Assisted with teaching responsibilities for upper level undergraduate courses in natural resources

Publications
Spiering, D. J. and R. L. Knight.  2005.
  Snag density and use by cavity-nesting birds in managed stands of
          the Black Hills National Forest.  Forest Ecology and Management 214, 40-52.
Spiering, D. J.  2004.  Wildlife use of snags in managed ponderosa pine stands in the Black Hills, South
          Dakota.  Thesis.  Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO. 
McCoy, T.R., D.J. Spiering, and C.D. Kreh.  2002.  Pine Log and Point Washington State Forests
          Flatwoods Salamander Project: January - April, 2002.  Florida Fish & Wildlife Conservation
          Commission, Division of Wildlife - Bureau of Wildlife Management.  Panama City, FL.

Professional Certification
Associate Ecologist by the Ecological Society of America, 2003 - 2008
Associate Wildlife Biologist by The Wildlife Society, 2006 - 2016

Professional Membership
Ecological Society of America
Natural Areas Association
Society for Conservation Biology
The Wildlife Society

 

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