Author's
Biography
AMY MCMILLAN
The giant salamanders (Cryptobranchidae): Part B.
Biogeography, ecology and reproduction. 2013. Robert K.
Browne, Hong Li, Zhenghuan
Wang, Sumio Okada, Paul M.
Hime, Amy McMillan, Minyao Wu, Raul
Diaz, Zhang Hongxing, Dale McGinnity, Jeffrey T.
Briggler. Amphibian and Reptile Conservation In
press.
The giant salamanders (Cryptobranchidae): Part A.
palaeontology, phylogeny, genetics, and morphology. 2012. Robert K. Browne, Hong Li, Zhenghuan Wang, Paul M. Hime,
Amy McMillan, Minyao Wu, Raul Diaz, Zhang Hongxing, Dale McGinnity, Jeffrey T.
Briggler. Amphibian and Reptile Conservation
5(4):17-29(e54).
Survey techniques for giant salamanders (Cryptobranchidae) and other
aquatic Caudata. 2011. Robert K Browne, Hong Li, Dale
McGinnity, Sumio
Okada, Wang
Zhenghuan, Catherine M
Bodinof, Kelly J
Irwin, Amy McMillan, Jeffrey T Briggler. Amphibian and Reptile Conservation 5(4):1-16(e34).
AMY MCMILLAN was trained as a population geneticist at the
University of Kansas in Lawrence, Kansas. Her work has ranged from insect metapopulations to
conservation genetics of birds and hellbender salamanders (Cryptobranchis alleganiensis). She is
presently in the Biology Department at Buffalo State College in Buffalo, NY, USA
(http://www.buffalostate.edu/biology/). Her current research with hellbenders involves numerous
graduate and undergraduate students who are defining the genetic diversity and structure of
populations at the northernmost portion of the range. This work will inform restoration and
restocking efforts in progress by the Buffalo Zoo and the New York Department of Environmental
Conservation.
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