Dr. Fernandez-Duque's Curriculum Vitae
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August 8, 2014 Eduardo Fernandez-Duque Email: [email protected] Personal Website: http://fernandezduque.wordpress.com/ Owl Monkey Project Website: http://owlmonkeyproject.wordpress.com Professor of Anthropology Department of Anthropology Yale University 10 Sachem Street, Room 314 New Haven, CT, 06511USA Phone: 203.432.3086; Fax: 203.432.3669 Email: [email protected] EDUCATION Ph.D., Animal Behavior, University of California, Davis, 1996. M.S., Animal Behavior, University of California, Davis, 1994. Licenciatura in Biology, University of Buenos Aires, Argentina, 1988. APPOINTMENTS Professor, Dept. of Anthropology, Yale University, 2014- Associate Professor, Dept. of Anthropology, Univ. Pennsylvania, 2012-2014. Invited Professor, Facultad de Recursos Naturales, Universidad de Formosa, Argentina, 2013- Assistant Professor, Dept. of Anthropology, Univ. Pennsylvania, 2006-2012. Faculty, Biological Basis of Behavior Program, Univ. Pennsylvania, 2010-present. Faculty, Psychology Graduate Group, Univ. Pennsylvania, 2007-present. Faculty Member, Center for Sleep and Circadian Neurobiology, School of Medicine, Univ. Pennsylvania, 2011. External Faculty, Center for Evolution and Cancer, University of California, San Francisco, 2011. Affiliated Faculty, Latin America & Latino Studies Program, Univ. Pennsylvania, 2010-present Vice-President, Fundación ECO, Formosa, Argentina, 2008-2012. Consulting Curator, Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, Univ. Pennsylvania, 2007- present. Director, Penn Anthropology Field Station, Formosa, Argentina, 2007-present. Research Associate, Population Studies Center, Univ. Pennsylvania, 2007-present. Director of Science, Fundación ECO, Formosa, Argentina, 2003-2007, 2012-present. Postdoctoral Fellow, Zoological Society of San Diego, 2000-2005. Adjunct Researcher, Conicet, Argentina, 1999-present. President, Fundación ECO, Formosa, Argentina, 1999-2001. Fernandez-Duque CV 8/8/2014 2 Research Associate, Department of Anthropology, Harvard University, 1999-2001. Visiting Scholar, Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies, Harvard University, 1999- 2001. Post-Doctoral Researcher, National Zoological Park, Smithsonian Institution, 1996-1998. GRANTS Total Awarded: $1,478,104 Awarded 2006-present: $846,624 Pending Grants 2015-2016: National Geographic Society, In Search of Ancestral Sleep (collaborator with PI Dr. H. de la Iglesia). 2014-2015: National Science Foundation, IOS Preliminary Proposal: Sleep Architecture and Social Behavior in Monogamous Monkeys (co-PI with PI H. de la Iglesia). Current Grants 2014-2017: University of Florida-Argentinean National Research Council (CONICET- Argentina), Bilateral Cooperation Program. Las Selvas en Galería del Chaco Húmedo Formoseño: Corredores de Biodiversidad y Aulas Universitarias (PI, in collaboration with John G. Blake. $300,000 Argentinean pesos). 2014-15: Leakey Foundation, In search of human ancestral sleep (collaborator with PI H. de la Iglesia, direct: $20,000, no indirect). 2014-2015: National Geographic Society, A comparative analysis of life-history, behavioral ecology and extra-pair paternity in socially monogamous titis and sakis of the Ecuadorian amazon (PI: E. Fernandez-Duque, in collaboration with A. Di Fiore, direct: $19,880, no indirect) 2013-2015: NSF-Biological Anthropology (BCS-1232349), Costs and Benefits of Biparental Care in Monogamous Owl Monkeys of Argentina (PI: E. Fernandez-Duque, direct: $191,710, indirect: $55,039, $246,749). 2013: Royalty Research Fund, University of Washington, Seattle, USA. Sleep Regulation in a Socially Monogamous Non-Human Primate (collaborator with PI H. de la Iglesia, direct: $40,000, no indirect). 2013-2014: American Society of Primatologists, General Small Grant, Leaving home: genetic correlates of owl monkey (Aotus azarae) dispersal in a naturally fragmented habitat (Advisor/Co-PI with Penn Ph.D. candidate Margaret Corley, $1500). 2013-2014: American Society of Primatologists, General Small Grant, Olfactory signals and partner choice in monogamous owl monkeys (Aotus nancymae) (Advisor/Co-PI with Penn Ph.D. candidate Andrea Spence-Aizenberg, $1500). 2013-2014: International Society of Primatologists, Research Grant, Olfactory signals and partner choice in monogamous owl monkeys (Aotus nancymae) (Advisor/Co-PI with Penn Ph.D. candidate Andrea Spence-Aizenberg, $1488). Past Grants Fernandez-Duque CV 8/8/2014 3 2013: International Initiatives Program/Provost’s Office, Summer Field Research support for 5 Penn students (PI, $13,100). 2012-2013: National Institutes of Aging-Pop Studies Center (Univ. Pennsylvania, P30 AG- 012836), TRIO Pilot Project Competition. Sex differences in the life-history and demography of socially monogamous primates (PI: E. Fernandez-Duque, direct: $32,126, indirect: $18,452, total: $50,542). 2012: Benjamin Franklin Seminar Development Grant, Love, Friendship and Marriage: the Biological Bases of Male-Female Relationships ($4,500), Fall 2012 (PI: E. Fernandez- Duque). 2012: NSF-RAPID Research in Biological Anthropology (BCS-1219368), Twinning in Monogamous Owl Monkeys of the Argentinean Chaco: Developmental, Behavioral and Demographic Consequences (PI: E. Fernandez-Duque, $11,806). 2012-13: Faculty Opportunity Grants, School of Arts&Sciences, University of Pennsylvania, towards the purchase of a vehicle (PI: E. Fernandez-Duque, $5,000). 2012: National Geographic Society, Committee for Research and Exploration, Twinning in Monogamous Owl Monkeys of Argentina: Development and Behavioral Consequences, (PI, $10,000). 2012: International Initiatives Program/Provost’s Office, Summer Field Research support for 4 Penn students (PI, $12,800). 2012: Penn Undergraduate Research Mentoring Program (PURM), Participation of Allison Bart (C'15) in field research in Argentina (PI, $5,500). 2010-11: American Society of Primatologists, Brumback Aotus Conservation Grant, Forest composition and use of patches of forest to evaluate demographic parameters in owl monkeys groups (Aotus azarai) inhabiting a naturally fragmented habitat in the Argentinean Chaco (Co-PI with Argentinean Ph.D. candidate Cecilia Juárez, $4766). 2010-11: International Society of Primatologists, Conservation Grant, Effects of a naturally fragmented habitat on the population biology of owl monkeys (Aotus azarai) in the humid Chaco of Argentina (Co-PI with Argentinean Ph.D. candidate Cecilia Juárez, $1940). 2010-11: American Society of Primatologists, Conservation Small Grant, Effects of a naturally fragmented habitat on the population biology of owl monkeys (Aotus azarai) in the humid Chaco of Argentina (Co-PI with Argentinean Ph.D. candidate Cecilia Juárez, $750). 2011: Penn SAS Instructional Technology Grants, Clicking your way to sex: the use of technology in the teaching of the biology of sex, (PI, $1,485 plus SAS Computing Staff support). 2011: Penn Undergraduate Research Mentoring Program (PURM), Participation of Jacquelyn Kemmer (C'14) in field research in Argentina (PI, $5,500). 2011: Penn Provost’s International Initiative Grant, Nocturnality and diurnality of sleep (PI, $21,000). 2010-11: L.S.B. Leakey Foundation, Molecular evolution of AVPR1A and OXTR in monogamous owl monkeys (Co-Advisor of Awardee, Ph.D. candidate Paul Babb, $13,200). 2010-11: National Geographic Society/Waitt Program, Predators of an owl monkey population in the Argentinean Chaco (Co-PI with Post-Doctoral Fellow Dr. Maren Huck, $14,740). Fernandez-Duque CV 8/8/2014 4 2010: Research Experience for Undergraduates, NSF, Social monogamy in free-ranging owl monkeys (Aotus azarai azarai) of Argentina: an experimental study of male and female contributions to territoriality, parental care, and pair bond maintenance (PI, $8,870). 2009-10: Penn University Research Foundation, Fatherhood and paternal care in socially monogamous owl monkeys (Aotus azarai) of the Argentinean Chaco (PI, $49,480). 2009: Research Experience for Undergraduates, National Science Foundation, Social monogamy in free-ranging owl monkeys (Aotus azarai azarai) of Argentina: an experimental study of male and female contributions to territoriality, parental care, and pair bond maintenance (PI, $8,520). 2009: Hewlett Award for Innovations in International Teaching, Univ. Pennsylvania, Primate behavior, ecology and conservation in the Ecuadorian Amazon and the Argentinean Chaco (PI, $16,500). 2008-09: National Geographic Society, The evolution of monogamy and paternal care in titi monkeys (Callicebus discolor) of the Ecuadorian Amazon. (Co-PI with A. Di Fiore, NYU, $20,000). 2008-09: The L.S.B. Leakey Foundation, The evolution of monogamy and paternal care in titi Monkeys (Callicebus discolor) of the Ecuadorian Amazon (PI with A. Di Fiore, NYU, $8,000). 2008: Research Experience for Undergraduates, National Science Foundation, Social monogamy in free-ranging owl monkeys (Aotus azarai azarai) of Argentina: an experimental study of male and female contributions to territoriality, parental care, and pair bond maintenance (PI, $8,120). 2008: Penn Provost' Undergraduate Research Mentoring Program (PURM), University of Pennsylvania, Grant to support the participation of Arden Rienas (C'11) in field research in Ecuador (PI, $7,500). 2007-08: University of Pennsylvania Research Foundation, Paternity analyses and genetic structure of a monogamous primate population (PI, $29,691). 2007-08: Conservation Trust, National Geographic Society, A national program for the conservation of owl monkeys and gallery forests in the Argentinean Gran Chaco (PI, $15,350). 2006-07: The SeaWorld&Busch