Dani Rabaiotti


Dani Rabaiotti is an environmental scientist and popular science writer based at the Institute of Zoology at the Zoological Society of London. Her fields of research include global change biology, science policy and science communication.

Education and research

Rabaiotti completed a BSc in Zoology at the University of Bristol in 2012. She then moved to the University of Leeds, achieving an MRes Biodiversity and Conservation. She is working toward a PhD with NERC London Doctoral Training Partnership.
Rabaiotti is currently working on the impact of climate change on African Wild Dogs. The data collection involves on-the-ground fieldwork as well as conservation technology. Her research with the Zoological Society of London, the Kenya Rangelands Wild Dog and Cheetah Project, has identified that less than 7,000 wild dogs and 10,000 cheetahs remain in Africa. Rabaiotti uses long term data on the species to the impact of temperature on behaviour, mortality and population level, working towards a spatially explicit species wide model.

Policy and public engagement

Rabaiotti was the 2016 BES POST Fellow. In this post, she wrote a POSTNote - a research briefing on Environmental Crime - any illegal activity that harms the environment. Following this, she secured a Research Councils UK science policy placement at the Royal Society. In 2017 she was selected by the British Ecological Society to ask leading figures within government and Parliament questions relating to science policy in the UK at the RSB's Voice of the Future.
When Bill Nye joined Twitter in 2017, Rabaiotti was the first scientist to greet him using the hashtag #BillMeetScienceTwitter. Less than a day after the hashtag was born, Nye replied with "I see you, Science Twitter. You are the aerodynamic laminar flow beneath my wings". Nye featured Rabaiotti in the trailer for Season 2 of Bill Nye Saves the World.
Rabaiotti is a contributor to BBC Wildlife Magazine, Gizmodo and Nature News & Comment. She has featured on radio, television and podcasts.

Does it Fart?

After a Twitter discussion about farting snakes, Rabaiotti partnered with Nick Caruso of the University of Alabama to crowd source a database of animal flatulence. Rabaiotti told the Washington Post that “Does it fart? is one of most frequent questions zoologists receive from kids". The pair published a book, illustrated by Ethan Kocak, with Quercus in 2017.
In 2018 the pair published the follow-up called True or Poo?, a book about "poop and gross animal habits".