Field of Focus
  • Ecology
  • Fisheries
  • Population Biology
  • Ecological Indicators
  • Habitat Loss
  • Hypoxia
  • Overfishing and Bycatch
  • Sustainable Development
Area of Expertise
Freshwater Inflow Effects on Estuaries; Trophodynamics; Fish Population Ecology; Ecosystem Analysis; Ecology; Fisheries; Population Biology; Ecological Indicators; Habitat Loss; Hypoxia; Overfishing and Bycatch; Sustainable Development
Education
  • Ph.D. in Marine Science, University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida, U.S.A., 1996
  • M.S. in Marine Science, University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida, U.S.A., 1987
  • B.S. in Biology, Environmental Studies, Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S.A., 1983

Research Interests

Most students in my lab are engaged in the Marine Resource Assessment program and are collectively pursuing a diversity of methods that apply to living resource biology and management. The common thread is coastal fish and shellfish habitat use and quality. One research focus has been spatio-temporal interactions between coastal fishes and their prey, particularly as these are affected by freshwater flows to the coast and other physical processes. Personnel from my lab have quantified estuarine ichthyoplankton and invertebrate zooplankton responses to freshwater flows from more than 18 watersheds along Florida's west coast; these results have been used to manage environmental flows. The same type of plankton data is being used to develop community-level metrics for establishing the extent of eutrophication in coastal water bodies. In another line of research, we use stable isotope analysis to investigate factors that influence coastal biomass pathways. We also use stable isotopes to contrast fish isotopic signatures with geographic background maps (isoscapes), which allows us to identify site fidelities and movements that determine geographic habitat connectivity. Recently, we added DNA barcoding and hydrodynamic models to our effort to characterize habitat connectivity during egg and larval stages. In a related effort, we have been using otolith microchemistry (LA-ICP-MS) to connect adult fish to the geographic regions they used as nursery habitat and to detect exposure of individual fish to stressful events such as oil spills

GoMRI-funded projects:

Center for Integrated Modeling and Analysis of Gulf Ecosystems (C-IMAGE Consortium, Year 2-4 Consortia Grants (RFP-I), Role: Co-Principal Investigator, Task Co-Lead)

Assessing the Concentration and the Molecular and Isotropic Composition of Deep sea Submerged Oils in the Northern Gulf of Mexico (Year One Block Grant - Florida Institute of Oceanography, Role: Research Staff)