Areas of interest:ÌýBiogeography; wildfire; climate; dendrochronology
Faculty Advisor: Tom Veblen
Thesis
2015 - Conifer regeneration after wildfire in low-elevation forests of the Colorado Front Range: Implications of a warmer, drier climate
Research Interests
I am a forest ecologist with expertise in biogeography, disturbance ecology, global change ecology, and fire history. As a member of the Biogeography Lab, directed by Thomas T. Veblen, my dissertation work addresses spatial and temporal patterns of post-fire conifer regeneration in low-elevation forests of the Colorado Front Range. I tackle my research questions using a variety of methodologies including experiments, field surveys, and tree-ring methods. Overall my aim as a researcher is to inform forest management in the context of ongoing climate and land-use changes.
Selected Publications
Rother, M.T. and Grissino-Mayer, H.D. (2014).ÌýClimatic influences on fire regimes in ponderosa pine forests of the Zuni Mountains, New Mexico, USA.ÌýForest Ecology and Management 322, 69-77.
Publications updated December 2014