I integrate landscape ecology and conservation practice. My expertise is in the interactions among land management, ecological processes, and conservation across landscapes. I received my Ph.D. in ecology from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and am currently a postdoc at NC State University, where I am investigating how land management, along with future climate change, will affect vegetation dynamics in the Southeast US. I take a multidisciplinary approach in my research, combining social science techniques with ecological models and spatial analysis tools. I have studied a broad range of ecosystems, both terrestrial and aquatic, including longleaf pine and spruce-fir forests, as well as estuaries of the Albemarle-Pamlico sound. I have collaborated with federal, state, and local governments, non-profits, and academic scientists to leverage my research toward land conservation. I also enjoy communicating conservation science with the public. My goal is to secure a permanent position that will allow me to continue to apply my research and expertise in landscape ecology to conservation problems.
News
October 20, 2011
My poster "Wildfire dynamics and the future of the longleaf pine ecosystem" was selected as best poster at the Student Conference on Conservation Science in New York.July 1, 2011
My poster "Conservation of the longleaf pine ecosystem: what does the future hold?" won 2nd place in the Global Change Award at the NC Museum of Natural Sciences in Raleigh.May 31, 2011
The second paper from my dissertation was just published online in Landscape Ecology. You can find it here.February 10, 2011
A paper based on my dissertation work was just published in Ecology and Society. Read it here.January 31, 2011
I just wrote a bulletin article about my postdoc work. Take a look.-
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