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<faculty>
   <name/>
   <firstname>Daniel</firstname>
   <lastname>MacNulty</lastname>
   <suffix/>
   <pronouns/>
   <department>Wildland Resources</department>
   <position>Professor</position>
   <background/>
   <location>NR 330</location>
   <campusMapURL/>
   <phone>(435) 797-7442</phone>
   <email>dan.macnulty@usu.edu</email>
   <hours/>
   <image/>
   <personalURL>/wild/labs/macnulty-lab/index.php</personalURL>
   <cvURL>https://qanr.usu.edu/_dev/_merge/qcnr/files/directory/cv/cv_MacNulty_26Jun2024.pdf</cvURL>
   <emphasis/>
   <expertise/>
   <bio>I work at the interface of animal behavior, population biology, and community ecology to address basic and applied questions in ecology and conservation. I began my research career in 1995 as a field technician in Yellowstone National Park where I assisted with wolf reintroduction and post-release wolf monitoring. I have conducted research related to Yellowstone wolves ever since. Much of my research centers on understanding the ecological consequences of wolf reintroduction as part of several long-term, collaborative studies of carnivores, ungulates, and plants in northern Yellowstone National Park. Many of my findings are presented in my co-authored/edited books Wolves on the Hunt: The Behavior of Wolves Hunting Wild Prey, and Yellowstone Wolves: Science and Discovery in the World’s First National Park, both published by the University of Chicago Press. </bio>
   <priority/>
   <anumber>A00689560</anumber>
   <altURL/>
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   <apptManagerURL/>
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</faculty>
