Karmen Hollis-Etter, Assistant Professor

Education: Ph.D., Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences, Wildlife Epidemiology, University of Illinois Champaign-Urbana; M.S., Biology, Wildlife Ecology, Western Illinois University; B.S., Agriculture, Animal Science, Western Illinois University
Relevant Experience: Over 13 years of college level teaching in Introductory Biology, College Biology, Environmental Science, Human Anatomy and Physiology, Introductory Biostatistics, Microbiology, Nature Study, Organismal Biology, Pathophysiology, River Ecology, Zoology
Teaching Areas: Animal behavior, biology, epidemiology, human anatomy and physiology, mammalogy, wildlife diseases, wildlife ecology, wildlife techniques
Courses at UM-Flint: BIO 167 (Human Anatomy and Physiology I); BIO 168 (Human Anatomy and Physiology II)
Research Interests: Wildlife epidemiology especially zoonotic diseases, urban wildlife, terrestrial mammal ecology, animal behavior