Chapman, Colin

时间:2020-08-19 23:37来源:ICBPC 作者:admin 点击:

Chapman, Colin (colin.chapman.research@gmail.com), Northwest University, Xian, China; McGill University, Montreal, QC H3A 2A7, Canada; Dali University, Dali, China; The George Washington University, Washington DC, USA, 20037; University of    KwaZulu-Natal, Scottsville, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa

Professor Chapman received his joint PhD at the University of Alberta, and then worked at Harvard University, the USA. Since 1990s his academic career has developed through Makerere University, Uganda, the Wildlife Conservation Society, the University of Florida, and George Washington University. Such endeavor has made him publish 500+ articles, been cited  more than 35,000+ times, with a H factor of 100, and has received ~ $11 million in research funding and been involved in ~$11 million in training grants. He is a Killam Research Fellow, Velan Foundation Awardee for Humanitarian Service, a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, and An Alexander von Humboldt Fellow. He was a member of the Committee for Research and Exploration at the National Geographic Society for 9 years. 

    Recent publications

1. Chapman, Colin, A., Júlio César Bicca-Marques, Sébastien Calvignac-Spencer, Pengfei Fan, Peter J. Fashing, Jan Gogarten, Songtao Guo, Claire A. Hemingway, Fabian Leendertz, Baoguo Li, Ikki Matsuda, Rong Hou, Juan Carlos Serio-Silva, and Nils Chr. Stenseth. Games academics play and their consequences: How authorship, h-index, and journal impact factors are shaping the future of academia. Proceedings of the Royal Society B. 286:2019: 2047.
2.  Atickem, Anagaw, Peter J. Fashing, Nga Nguyen, Colin A. Chapman, Afework Bekele, Addisu Mekonnen, Patrick A. Omeja, Urs Kalbitzer, and Nils Chr. Stenseth. 2019. Build Science in Africa. Nature 570297-300
3. Chapman, C. A., Bortolamiol, S., Matsuda, I., Omeja, P. A., Paim, F. P., Reyna-Hurtado, R., Sengupta, R. & Valenta, K. 2018. Primate population dynamics: variation in abundance over space and time. Biodiversity and Conservation, 27:1221-1238.
4. Chapman, C.A., T.T. Struhsaker, J.P. Skorupa, T.V. Snaith, and J.M. Rothman. 2010. Understanding long-term primate community dynamics: implications of forest change. Ecological Applications 20:179-191.
5. Chapman, C.A., M.D. Wasserman, T.R. Gillespie, M.L. Speirs, M.J. Lawes, T.L. Saj, and T.E. Ziegler. 2006. Do nutrition, parasitism, and stress have synergistic effects on red colobus populations living in forest fragments? American Journal of Physical Anthropology 131:525-534.

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