Peter Trull has been involved in Research and Education for about 30 years. From 1976 to 1986 he coordinated Mass Audubon Society's coastal seabird monitoring program and conducted research in Guyana and Surinam, studying the market trapping of Common Terns and Roseate Terns, where he hesitatingly admits he's eaten Common Terns and 15 to 20 species of sandpipers and plovers.   As Education Director and Senior Field Naturalist at the Cape Cod Museum of Natural History, he developed programs and began studying Eastern Coyotes in 1989. Through the 90's, as a researcher and Education Director at the Center for Coastal Studies in Provincetown, he developed and taught classes related to whales and marine ecosystems and completed over 1,400 whalewatching trips related to education and research.  He presently teaches 7th grade Science at the Cape Cod Lighthouse Charter School in Orleans.  He has written three books about Cape Cod natural history and is currently conducting long term research on Eastern Coyotes.  He recently received a grant to study Fisher (Martes pennanti) with his students on cape cod.