At the Conservation Ecology Center (CEC), Zoo conservation scientists work together find ways to restore and protect at-risk wildlife species and their supporting ecosystems. Their work spans key marine and terrestrial regions throughout the world. Our biologists helped shape the field of conservation biology, and have forged and honed the cutting edge of conservation science, focusing on the biology of extinction, overabundant species, nutritional ecology, endangered landscapes, and ways to prioritize and assess conservation strategies. CEC scientists have unparalleled experience among zoos with field-based programs in identifying what endangered species need for their continued survival in real-world landscapes. An array of experts working in concert to ttake into accound the diverse needs of people and wildlife is the best way to stem the tide of species loss in a changing, human-dominated world.
Tiger Conservation in the Wild in Asia
Smithsonian scientists were among the first to begin working for tiger preservation. Since then, they've been leaders in studying tiger behavioral ecology and conservation.Learn more
Cats in Sri Lanka
Zoo conservation ecologists are conducting the first in-depth study of elusive fishing cats and rusty cats in Sri Lanka. Learn more
Sloth Bears in India
In the 1970s, Zoo scientists were among the first to study sloth bears in the wild. These bears, who share a sub-continent with more than a billion people, present unique conservation ecology challenges. Learn more
Conservation GIS Lab
Using satellite imagery and Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to identify, monitor and fight habitat loss and species extinction globally. Learn more
White-tailed Deer
White-tailed deer play a key ecological role in our eastern forests, and offer ecologists a way to assess forest health.
more
Antarctic Expedition
Zoo scientists ventured to the southernmost continent to study the ecology and diet of Weddell seals. Learn more
Studies of Reproductive Strategies of Gray and Harbor Seals at Sable Island
Seals spend most of their lives at sea, where they find an abundant supply of fish for food. But they come ashore to give birth and rear their young. This dichotomy produces intriguing mating systems.
Learn more
Desert Tortoise
Desert tortoises are a declining species. And yet they live in an, apparnetly, sparse environment. Zoo scientists studied what types of food desert tortoises need to survive.
Learn more
Bottlenose Dolphins of Sarasota Bay
Zoo scientists joinined forces with Randall Wells of the Sarasota Dolphin Research Program to determine why half the bottlenose dolphin calves born in the resident population of Sarasota Bay, Florida, fail to survive to maturity. Learn more