Stephen R. Tully Memorial Grant

The Stephen R. Tully Memorial Grant is given to support research, and conservation of raptors especially to students and amateurs with limited access to alternative funding. The award is given in memory of Steve Tully, a young raptor biologist, who lost his life in an automobile accident in 1978. Agency proposals are not accepted.

The Stephen R. Tully Memorial Grant was established in late 1983. The grant honours the memory of Steve Tully, who died in a car accident in 1978, at age 21. Steve was a falconer with an enthusiastic interest in raptor biology. A Colorado resident, Steve was married to Babette (nee Cranson), another early RRF member. It was a measure of Steve’s dedication to raptors that he was searching for his trained red-tailed hawk after the accident when he died of internal haemorrhaging before he received treatment for his injuries. Steve’s family and friends established the grant in homage to him and to perpetuate the conservation and study of the raptors he loved in life.

To apply, send:

  1. A cover letter.
  2. A proposal (no more than four pages)
    a. background
    b. objectives of your study
    c. methods
    d. anticipated budget
    e. list of other funding sources, both requested and received.

Amount: $500

Number of Grants Issued per Year: 1

Deadline: Complete applications must be submitted by 15 February. Recipients will be notified by 15 April.

Contact: Dr. Carole Griffiths, 251 Martling Ave, Tarrytown, NY 10591; tel. 914-631-2911; e-mail: cgriff@liu.edu.

Recent Recipients:

Year Tully Recipient Title
2011 Laxman Prasad Poudyal Vulture Conservation Awareness Program in Chitwan National Park, Nepal
2010 Scolasticah Ndegwa Distribution and population size of Martial Eagles in Kakemega Forest, Kenya
2009 Jessi Brown Ecology of the Southeastern American Kestrel
2008 Mark Jasper Determining the effects of parasitic disease on the onset of migration of Red-tailed Hawks (Buteo jamaicensis) using stable isotope analysis
2007 Corinne Kozlowski Androgen allocation in the Eastern Screech Owl
2006 Michael A. Palladini Cooper’s Hawk foraging ecology in an interior ponderosa pine forest: response to experimental restoration treatments at an Adaptive management Area
2005 Ursula Valdez Ecology and Habitat Use of Forest-falcons in the Amazonian Forest of Southeast Peru
2004 No applications received
2003 Shelley Bayard de Volo Genetic fingerprinting for identifying individual Northern Goshawks in studies of survival
2003 Gabriel Jaime Colorado Monitoring the migration of North American raptors in Northern Columbia
2002 Unknown
2001 Unknown
2000 Unknown
1999 Roberval Alameida and Eduardo Baldioceda Strategies for conserving rainforest raptors in the buffer zones of Costa Rica national parks
1998 Nicole Korfanta Population genetics in resident and migratory Burrowing Owls
1997 Jennifer Jacoby The genetics of a reintroduced population of an endangered bird, Falco peregrinus
1997 Stacy Lindemann Factors affecting biparental care in the American Kestrel
1996 Unknown
1995 Wendy A. Kuntz Regional variation in the vocalization patterns of Mexican Spotted Owls
1994 Robert Warnock Effects of habitat fragmentation on Burrowing Owls
1993 Elsie V. Schmidt Morphological & genetic variation in migrating raptors
1992 Martha J. Desmond
1991 Neal D. Niemuth
1991 Kevin J. Merkel
1990 Cynthia Sills
1989 Dale K. Ward
1988 Gian Basili
1987 Kelly Hogan
1986 Vicky J. Meretsky
 

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