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Dr. Epp is a behavioral and evolutionary ecologist who specializes in conservation ecology and predator-prey relationships in freshwater ecosystems. She has worked most extensively with imperiled salamanders and fish. Before coming to Eastern, Dr. Epp was a faculty member at Ottawa University, Kansas. She earned her Ph.D. in Aquatic Resources (Biology) at Texas State University.
More than 100 Eastern students each year participate in one of Dr. Epp’s research projects, a long-term, mark-recapture study of Redback Salamanders. The project is part of a large-scale research collaborative of more than 20 research teams across the Northeast.
Zabierek, K, KJ Epp. 2016. Antipredator response of Eurycea nana to a nocturnal and a diurnal predator: avoidance is not affected by circadian cycles of predators. Amphibia-Reptilia 37, 397-403.
Epp, KJ. 2013. Threat sensitivity in the San Marcos salamander: the role of predator diet and prey experience. Behaviour 150, 617-634.
Davis, DR, KJ Epp, CR Gabor. 2012. Predator generalization decreases the effect of introduced predators in the San Marcos salamander, Eurycea nana. Ethology 118, 1191-1197.
Thaker, M, JN Fries, KJ Epp, CR Gabor. 2010. Cohabitation patterns of the San Marcos salamander (Eurycea nana). Amphibia-Reptilia 31, 503-508.
Epp, KJ, R Gonzales, CR Gabor. 2010. The role of water-borne chemical cues in mediating social interactions of the Texas blind salamander, Eurycea rathbuni. Amphibia-Reptilia 31, 294-298.