misty mountain landscape

Therese Tepe

Education

B.S., Wildlife Biology, Colorado State University.,M.P.A., Masters in Public Affairs, Indiana University.,M.S.E.S., Masters in Environmental Science, Indiana University.

Therese Tepe, formerly GWC’s conservation partnerships officer, manages U.S. government-funded biodiversity, forestry, and climate change projects in Southeast Asia and West Africa from Washington D.C. She works closely with both international and in-country partners when implementing these conservation projects. Previously, she had been based in Malaysia working on tiger conservation throughout Asia.

Publications

Tepe, T. L. 2012. Scenarios of biodiversity change: Modeling future habitat availability for tigers. Chapter 3: Living Planet Report 2012: 103. http://d2ouvy59p0dg6k.cloudfront.net/downloads/1_lpr_2012_online_full_size_single_pages_final_120516.pdf,Launay, F., N. Cox, M. Baltzer, T. Tepe, J. Seidensticker, S. Christie, R. Krishnamurthy, T. Gray, S. Simcharoen, M. Wright, R. Singh, S. Lumpkin, and C. Bruce. 2012. Preliminary Study of the Feasibility of a Tiger Restoration Programme in Cambodia’s Eastern Plains. WWF Tigers Alive Initiative.,Tepe, T., and V. Meretsky. 2011. Forward-Looking Forest Restoration Under Climate Change- Are U.S. Nurseries Ready? Restoration Ecology 19: 295-298.,

Johnson, B.W., R. Bortner, J. Kemp, T. Sichmiller, S. Swanty, T. Tepe, and D. E. Gammon. 2004. Human Awareness Concerning the Effects of Domestic Cats on Wildlife Along the Front Range, Colorado: A Survey. Colorado Field Ornithologists 38: 150-154.

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