Adventures in SES Land

Abstract

This seminar will summarize four research projects studying socio-environmental systems (SES) also known as coupled natural-human systems (CNH). These projects include: 1) sparsely settled forests of the United States (a past SESYNC project); 2) climate change; 3) the Maine healthy beaches initiative (involving bacterial loads coming from inland that negatively impacts the shellfishing industry on the coast); and 4) anthropogenic impacts on biodiversity. This talk will also address the different team structures, processes, and challenges of doing SES work in each case. The last topic explores some science communication and culture of science issues.

Presenters

Image
A headshot of Brian McGill

Brian McGill

Dr. Brian McGill studies how human impacts (especially climate change and land-use change) are impacting biodiversity at different scales. He is a Professor at the University of Maine with a joint appointment in the School of Biology and Ecology and the Mitchell Center for Sustainability Solutions and a courtesy appointment in the Climate Change Institute. Much of his work centers on big data. He frequently collaborates with social scientists, including on past SESYNC projects. He is currently serving as Editor-in-Chief of the journal Global Ecology and Biogeography and has lots of opinion...

Image
A headshot of Brian McGill

Brian McGill

Dr. Brian McGill studies how human impacts (especially climate change and land-use change) are impacting biodiversity at different scales. He is a Professor at the University of Maine with a joint appointment in the School of Biology and Ecology and the Mitchell Center for Sustainability Solutions and a courtesy appointment in the Climate Change Institute. Much of his work centers on big data. He frequently collaborates with social scientists, including on past SESYNC projects. He is currently serving as Editor-in-Chief of the journal Global Ecology and Biogeography and has lots of opinion about how to get published and the trends in the publishing landscape. He is one of three bloggers on the ecology blog, Dynamic Ecology. He has previously been on the faculty at the University of Arizona and McGill University and got his PhD and postdoc at the University of Arizona and Michigan State University respectively.

Presenters
Brian McGill, School of Biology and Ecology, University of Maine
Date
Time
11:00 a.m. ET
Location
SESYNC – 1 Park Place, Suite 300 Annapolis, MD 21401
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