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About

Photography and Video Materials

Minolta 35mm Freedom Zoom

Canon EOS RebelG 35mm (film)

Canon 28 to 80 millimeter lens with a UV filter

Canon 80 to 200 millimeter lens

Kodak Max 400 speed film

Kodak 800 speed film

Canon EOS Digital Rebel, 6.3 megapixels (SanDisk Extreme 64 GB CF card)

Canon 100 to 300 millimeter Ultrasonic Zoom lens

Hewlett-Packard Scanjet 3300C

Dazzle media reader

iPhone 5

iPhone 6s

Bushnell Cam™ Trophy XLT, (Sandisk 32 GB SD card), still and video

Black Label Innovations WI-FI Outdoor Camera

Turcom Wireless Bullet Cam, TS-623

Moultrie®, GM-30i, Digital Game Camera, (Sandisk 32 GB SD card), video

DE, Multi-card Reader, www.DEWORLD.com

Device Client, WI-FI Camera Software, v.2.0.8.13, copyright @2016

Netcam, U-Home X, WI-FI Camera Software, 9.1.1.8, P2P 1.5.2.0, Netcam360.com

Adobe® Photoshop® Elements 9, Free version, San Jose, CA, 2010.

Roxio Creator™, NXT 2, Version 15.0.5.2;5.0.0.0, Copyright © Corel Corporation

Roxio Creator, NXT Pro 4, Version 15.0.71.12;5.0.0.0, Copyright © Corel Corporation

Figure 1. One of the cameras trained on the edge along the woods facing south.

Citizen Science: Living on the Edge

 

Professionally, Jonathan A. Zearfoss is a chef and Professor of Culinary Science at the Culinary Institute of America. This website is a project in partial fulfillment of a Master of Arts in Liberal Studies from SUNY (Empire State College).

​

Jonathan is a member of the National Eagle Scout Association, the Ecological Society of America, the Aldo Leopold Society of the Cary Institute for Ecosystem Studies, the National Wildlife Federation, and Defenders of Wildlife (Guardian level). He is an active supporter of the National Audubon Society, the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, the Sierra Club as well.

​

The property featured on this website is NWF (National Wildlife Federation) Certified Wildlife Habitat having met the specific criteria for that certification.

Special Thanks

This work is dedicated to the memory of my Father, ever the Boy Scout, and my Mother, who taught me the joys of foraging.

​

Thank you to:

My advisor, Dr. Susan Tower Hollis, PhD.

My first reader, Dr. Nikki Shrimpton, PhD.

My second reader, Dr. Eileen O'Connor, PhD.

SUNY (Empire State College)

​

Thank you also to:

Alex DiCicco, Faculty Training & Technology Specialist, The Culinary Institute of America

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Macaulay Library at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. The following recordings from the Macaulay Library at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology were used: 60082, 20431, 138594, 191216, 192231, 55340, 102896, 126375,94299, 94284, 94344, 49080, 107967, 23129, 176156, 49719, 63121, 16927. (See below for further attribution of individual recordists.)

 

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Yeargan, Kenneth V., and Cora M. Allard. “Comparison of Common Milkweed and Honeyvine Milkweed (Asclepiadaceae) as Host Plants for Monarch Larvae (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae).” Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society 78, no. 3 (2005): 247–51.

The following recordings from the Macaulay Library at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology were used:

LAT 41 degrees 50' 26" N, LON 073 degrees 54' 46" W
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