Luke Hunter

Luke Hunter is an Australian biologist and is the President of Panthera Corporation, a New York-based conservation charity he helped to create in 2006 which is dedicated to the range-wide conservation of the world’s wild cat species.[1]

Prior to that, he headed the Great Cats Program of the Wildlife Conservation Society, and held positions at universities in Australia and South Africa. Hunter has worked on the ecology and conservation of carnivores in Africa since 1992. His doctorate and post-doctoral research developed methods to re-establish populations of cheetahs and lions in areas where they had been extirpated from Southern Africa. His current projects include assessing the effects of sport hunting and illegal persecution on leopards outside protected areas, developing a conservation strategy for lions across their African range, and the first intensive study of Persian leopards, striped hyaenas, wolves and the last surviving Asiatic cheetahs in Iran.

Publications

  • Hunter, Luke, and Priscilla Barrett. Wild Cats of the World. London ; New York : Bloomsbury Natural History, 2015
  • Hunter, Luke, and Priscilla Barrett. Carnivores of the World. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2011.
    • Raubtiere der Welt : ein Feldführer (German translation, 2012)
  • Hunter, Luke, and Gerald Hinde. Cats of Africa: Behavior, Ecology, and Conservation. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2006.
  • Hunter, Luke, Susan Rhind, and David Andrew. Watching Wildlife: Southern Africa. Melbourne: Lonely Planet, 2002.
  • Hunter, Luke, and David Andrew. Watching Wildlife: Central America. Footscray, Vic: Lonely Planet Publications, 2002.
gollark: Unfortunately, I have forgotten all my knowledge of German in the past two years.
gollark: You might as well ask why "eat" becomes "ate" in the past tense.
gollark: English does not routinely run on consistently applied rules.
gollark: Fixed it. (oops, I meant to send this in <#426116061415342080> but messed up the channel somehow, sorry)
gollark: Possibly because there seems to be a weird lack of good open-source OCR stuff (Tesseract isn't general enough to work on memes).

References

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