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REMOTE SENSING

Modern problems require innovative solutions. The spatial patterns of wildlife and landscapes are characterized by increasing complexity - and only recently have scientists been provided access the tools to sufficiently study them. I am always searching for ways to advance the field of wildlife movement by incorporating cutting-edge technologies or drawing from other disciplines in my research. Remote sensing is one such example, with satellite and aerial imagery providing large quantities of accessible, high-resolution data to describe ecosystems and animal habitat.

To learn more about my research involving remote sensing, click on an image below.

Cry of the Wolf

A Remote Sensing Approach to Modeling the Energy Landscape of Gray Wolves

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Application of LiDAR to assess the habitat selection of salt marsh harvest mice

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Aerial imagery captures the historical invasion of the common reed in a brackish coastal wetland

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