Attila Németh

Postdoctoral Fellow

Street address: Mammalia Collection, Dept. of Zoology, Hungarian Natural History Museum
1083 Budapest, Ludovika tér 2.
Postal address: 1431 Budapest, POB 137
Phone: +36-1-210-1075/5033
Fax: +36-1-338-2728
E-mail: attila(dot)valhor(at)gmail(dot)com

 

Current research interest
Studying the effect of Quaternary climatic oscillation to the biological diversity and changing environment through the example of an evolutionary model mammal
Conservation biology
Speciation and adaptive radiation in general

Scientific degree
2011 PhD, Eötvös University, Budapest

Education
2006 MSc in Biology, Eötvös University, Budapest

Employment
2013 – postdoc, MTA–MTM–ELTE Research Group for Paleontology

Study trips
2012 School of Biological Sciences, Queens University, Belfast, Northern Ireland, UK
2010 Department of Evolutionary and Environmental Biology and Institute of Evolution, University of Haifa, Haifa, Izrael
2006 Institute of Evolution, University of Haifa, Haifa, Izrael
2005 Institute of Evolution, University of Haifa, Haifa, Izrael

Collectings 2012 Serbia
2012 Mauritius
2011 Romania (Transylvania)
2010 Serbia (North and Middle parts)
2010 Romania (Transylvania)
2009 Northern Serbia
2009 Romania (Transylvania, Dobruja, Muntenia, Oltenia)
2008 Northern Serbia
2008 Romania (Transylvania)

International cooperations
Department of Evolutionary and Environmental Biology and Institute of Evolution, University of Haifa, Israel
Schmalhausen Zoological Institute, Kiev, Ukraine
University of Diesburg-Essen, Germany
Queens University, Belfast, Northern Ireland
Babes-Bolyai University, Cluj, Romania
Dicle University, Diyarbakir, Turkey
Institute of Nature Conservation in Serbia, Novi Sad

Service in scientific bodies
2013 Kiskunság National Park, project advisor
2012 – secretary of the Mammal Conservation Group of BirdLife Hungary
2009 – European Dry Garssland Group
2009 – member of the Mole Rats Conservation Group of the Ministry of Rural Development
2006 – Hungarian Mammalogical Society
2003 – Hungarian Biological Society