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Animal Behaviorist
An animal behaviorist does more than just train animals to sit and
fetch. Professionals in this field use scientific techniques to
study (and sometimes modify) an animal’s behavior. They are
concerned with understanding the causes, functions, development,
and evolution of animal behavior. The development of behavior pertains
to the ways in which behavior changes over the lifetime of an animal,
and how these changes are affected by both genes and experience.
The evolution of behavior relates to the origins of behavior patterns
and how these change over generations.
Animal behaviorists work in a very wide variety of jobs, with all
sorts of animals. Many teach at colleges and universities or do
independent research. They may be in departments such as animal
science, veterinary medicine, wildlife biology, or entomology, and
biology. Another opportunity for animal behaviorists to be involved
with research is by working for a private pharmaceutical company
that uses animals for drug testing. Also, government agencies and
private environmental consulting firms are hiring people with animal
behavior degrees to examine the effects of habitat alteration, foraging
patterns, population, and reproductive processes in animals. Animal
behaviorists are also hired by zoos, aquariums or museums to improve
health and reproduction, or to work on education programs for the
public, such as tours, lectures, and educational displays.
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