Abdullahi Hussein Ali (former PhD student, UW)

Abdullahi Hussein Ali (former PhD student, UW)

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Biography

Besides the guy in the Dos Equis commercials, Abdullahi Hussein Ali might be the most interesting man in the world (we're biased, of course!). Fluent in four languages, Ali was born to a household of 13 brothers and sisters on the Kenya-Somali border. At the age of eight, he first set foot in a permanent structure, a schoolhouse that his uncle--then the Chief of General Staff of the Kenya Defence Forces--built with funds from the president as a reward for suppressing a military coup.

Ali's dissertation focused on the range collapse, demography, and conservation of hirola, a critically endangered antelope confined to a swath of unprotected land in eastern Kenya.

Current position: Director and Founder, Hirola Conservation Programme

Recent Publications

Ali, A.H., A.T. Ford, J.S. Evans, D. Mallon, M.M. Hayes, J. King, R. Amin, and J.R. Goheen. 2017. Resource selection and landscape change reveal mechanisms suppressing population recovery for the world's most endangered antelope. Journal of Applied Ecology 54:1720-1729. PDF

Ali, A.H., M.J. Kauffman, R. Amin, A. Kibara, J. King, D. Mallon, C. Musyoki, and J.R. Goheen. 2018. Demographic drivers of a refugee species: large-scale experiments guide strategies for reintroductions of hirola. Ecological Applications 28:275-283. PDF

Ali, A.H., R. Amin, J.S. Evans, M. Fischer, A.T. Ford, A. Kibara, and J.R. Goheen. 2019. Evaluating support for range-restoration practices by rural Somalis: a win-win for local livelihoods and conservation of the world’s most endangered antelope? Animal Conservation 234:82-89. PDF