The
Basics
I
am currently a Ph. D. student at the University
of California Berkeley under Dr.
Maggi Kelly. My studies will focus on the
use of GIS in landscape ecology with a special consideration
for the preservation of trees.
I
graduated from St.
Olaf College (May 2003) with a B.A. in Environmental
Studies, Biology, and English. I am originally from West Bend,
Wisconsin, a town of 30,000 people just northwest of Milwaukee.
When I arrived at college, I had my mind set on environmental
concerns and how to communicate them to the larger populace.
What I did not know was how I was going to focus my studies.
As
time went on, I found myself leaning towards issues of conservation
in the context of human expansion. Growing up in West Bend and later
attending college in Northfield, MN, I witnessed the effects of
suburban sprawl on the landscape and knew there was a better way
to go about planning our cities.
Interests
Sprawl
and the general pace of development across the world concerns me
greatly. Beginning with a family trip to Costa Rica, I took a particular
interest in habitat fragmentation and how to mitigate its detrimental
effects on biodiversity and ecosystem stability. The development
of habitat corridors is a solution which I find promising.
Furthermore,
I am interested in the role of computers in conservation efforts.
Over the past three years, I have used geographic information systems
(GIS) extensively, from modeling wildfire to recommending conservation
plans. While GIS is certainly not an end in itself, it is an important
tool to ecologists and conservation biologists as the scale of environmental
problems continues to increase.
As
human population continues to expand and its demands increase, we
will find our interests conflicting with the well being of the natural
world more and more often. To alleviate the pressures on all interested
parties, we will need to develop an effective system of collaborative
decision-making. In this system, I would like to see myself as both
citizen-expert and interpreter. Too often the marvels of modern
ecology and conservation biology sit in the pages of refereed journals,
unknown to the general public. In addition to my own research, I
would like to "interpret" both the basics and the breakthroughs
in the field to encourage a broader eco-consciousness among the
populace.
About
this Site
This
website is your window into my world (or at least part of it). The
sections are self-explainatory and I have included links to any
relevant sites, including those I have authored. Browse around and
let me know what you think. |