Dalton B. Neuharth, M.S.

Mr. Neuharth has 9 years of experience in threatened and endangered wildlife ecology. He has contributed to research on federally and state listed species, as well as species of greatest conservation need, in Texas and New Mexico. Herpetofauna that Dalton has conducted research for include the Houston Toad, Eurycea salamanders, Rio Grande Cooter, Tamaulipan and Plateau Spot-tailed Earless Lizards, Dune Sagebrush Lizard, and Louisiana Pine Snake. He specializes in threatened and endangered species research, surveys, and habitat and population assessments. He is proficient in field and statistical techniques. His thesis focused on the response of a lizard community following a catastrophic wildfire and efficacy of subsequent management via habitat modifications. Mr. Neuharth has 8 peer-reviewed wildlife publications, all focusing on herpetofauna. He is experienced at conducting presence/absence surveys and capture-mark-recapture monitoring. He has 2 years of capture-mark-recapture monitoring on several central Texas Eurycea species, specifically Jollyville Plateau, Georgetown, and Salado salamanders.