Ian MacGregor-Fors
is Researcher at the Institute of Ecology (INECOL) in Mexico. His passion for birds since adolescence lead him to study Biology at the University of Guadalajara (Mexico). After receiving a PhD with honors at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), he has focused his research on the response of wildlife communities to human disturbances (mainly in towns and cities) and the ecology and distribution of invasive bird species. He has authored or coauthored over 65 publications in scientific journals, as well as two books, several book chapters, and diverse popular science pieces. As of 2012, he is part of the Advisory Board of the International Network Urban Biodiversity & Design (URBIO), seeking to promote the implementation of the United Nations ‘Convention on Biological Diversity’ (CBD) in urban areas. He was Associate Editor for Landscape and Urban Planning from 2014 to 2016 (where he is currently Editorial Advisor), and is presently Associate Editor for the Journal of Urban Ecology, Urban Naturalist, and
Huitzil
–the Mexican Journal of Ornithology. He is confident that the use of evidence-based knowledge considering the physical, ecological, and social spheres of urban systems can result in the development of biodiverse, resilient, and healthy cities, for which willingness of all implied stakeholders is keystone.
Juan F. Escobar-Ibáñez
is a PhD student at the Institute of Ecology (INECOL), Mexico. After studying Biology at the University of Guadalajara (Mexico), he carried out a master’s focused on the role that sugarcane croplands embedded in a cloud forest matrix have on avian communities using a landscape-scale approach. His PhD dissertation is framed on the responses of bird communities to urbanization in four urbanized sites of central Veracruz (Mexico), focusing on diversity and composition changes, as well as identifying some of the related drivers, with an important focus on nest predation.His publications are focused on the natural history and ecology of birds in human disturbed sites, mainly urban. Together with Dr. Ian MacGregor-Fors, he is leading a project to assess the response of birds to urbanization across Mexican capital cities. His main goal as a scientists is to use scientific knowledge as foundation to develop strategies that reduce our impact on biodiversity and increase human well-being in anthropogenic socio-ecosystems.