[1] She studied biology in Bremen and in 1996 she worked with a wolf pack in Estonia as part of her diploma thesis.
After spending some time in Brandenburg, she is currently living in Oberlausitz in Saxony, where the first free-living wolf packs in Germany have settled.
[4] Gesa Kluth works together with the International Fund for Animal Welfare, the Naturschutzbund Deutschland and the Saxon State Ministry for Environment and Agriculture.
Gesa Kluth is co-author of many specialist publications by members of the Large Carnivore Initiative for Europe.
[5][6] In 2003/2004 Gesa Kluth, Sebastian Körner and Ilka Reinhardt discovered a litter of hybrids in Lusatia which was to be taken from the wild.