Dr. Kelsey Reider
B.S., Zoology, Marine Ecology; Ohio State University
M.S. and Ph.D, Biology; Florida International University
I'm a broadly-trained ecologist with interests that span organismal biology, ecosystem ecology, and environmental sciences.
B.S., Zoology, Marine Ecology; Ohio State University
M.S. and Ph.D, Biology; Florida International University
I'm a broadly-trained ecologist with interests that span organismal biology, ecosystem ecology, and environmental sciences.
Alondra Medina - M.S. in Biology (anticipated 2023)
B.S., Biology; Universidad de Puerto Rico-Rio Piedras, 2020
My main research interests include tropical community ecology and the conservation of species experiencing rapid population declines, such as birds, amphibians, and reptiles. Some of my previous work involved assessing how collared peccaries (Pecari tajacu) served as ecosystem engineers to herpetofauna in Costa Rica. My current project focuses on understanding how biogeochemical processes in the brown food web and soil substrate characteristics may drive community assemblage and diversity of leaf litter amphibians and reptiles in lowland tropical forests of Central and South America.
B.S., Biology; Universidad de Puerto Rico-Rio Piedras, 2020
My main research interests include tropical community ecology and the conservation of species experiencing rapid population declines, such as birds, amphibians, and reptiles. Some of my previous work involved assessing how collared peccaries (Pecari tajacu) served as ecosystem engineers to herpetofauna in Costa Rica. My current project focuses on understanding how biogeochemical processes in the brown food web and soil substrate characteristics may drive community assemblage and diversity of leaf litter amphibians and reptiles in lowland tropical forests of Central and South America.
Kentrell Richardson - M.S. in Biology (anticipated 2023)
B.S., Wildlife Sciences; University of Georgia, 2020
I am Kentrell Richardson and my research centers around understanding reasons for variability in amphibian response to climate change. I study how environmental factors as well as amphibian life history interplays with their ability to react to changing conditions pushing organisms towards their critical thermal limits.
B.S., Wildlife Sciences; University of Georgia, 2020
I am Kentrell Richardson and my research centers around understanding reasons for variability in amphibian response to climate change. I study how environmental factors as well as amphibian life history interplays with their ability to react to changing conditions pushing organisms towards their critical thermal limits.