About Me

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.

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