Welcome Dr. Candice Klingerman
Dr. Klingerman grew up in Levittown, PA. She
earned her B.S.
in Small Animal Science from Delaware Valley College, her M.S. in Animal
Science
from the University of Delaware, and her Ph.D. in
Integrative Biology
from Lehigh University.
Dr.
Klingerman’s
expertise is in the area of behavioral
testing and observation, including
detecting differences in sexual and ingestive motivation in rodents. Her
primary research interests are energy balance
and reproduction in male and
female mammals.
She is investigating why female Syrian hamsters
(Mesocricetus
auratus)
in negative energy balance
(anorexia) increase their motivation for food
(food hoarding) and decrease their motivation to
reproduce (scent marking)
but not food intake or
sexual performance (lordosis reflex).
Dr.
Klingerman’s
secondary research interest relates to
hydrogen sulfide, a toxic gas. She is
trying to understand how it causes its deadly affects, so that successful
antidotes can be developed that reduce its toxicity and increase the chance of
survival.
Dr.
Klingerman has taught and/or performed research at Lehigh University, the
University of Delaware, and Monash University (Clayton, Australia). Most
recently, she was a post-doctoral fellow in the Department of Medicine, Pulmonary
Division, at the Penn State University College of Medicine, Hershey. This
fall she taught Anatomy and Physiology I and Concepts in Biology I laboratories.
In
her free time, Dr. Klingerman likes to tend to her “zoo” which currently
includes two dogs (a boxer and a dachshund), a rabbit, and lots of fish (a large
South American Cichlid aquarium, a damsel and clownfish salt water aquarium, a koi
pond, and her office freshwater, tropical aquarium). She also enjoys
traveling around the world, eating good food, biking, hiking, gardening,
canoeing, fishing, horseback riding, and spending time outdoors.
Glad
to have you with us Dr. Klingerman!