I study how landscapes influence wild animal populations from fundamental and applied perspectives. I conduct fundamental research that tests hypotheses about how habitat influences the dynamics of animal populations, and then I work to understand how populations, habitats, and landscapes can be managed in ways that maximize important societal values, such as preventing species extinction, maximizing ecosystem health, maximizing recreational value, and reducing management cost.

Decision makers in natural resource management are challenged by complex decisions with great uncertainty. To help navigate difficult decisions, I work with cooperators and decision makers to use decision analysis tools (e.g., structured decision making) to improve shared understanding of problems, objectives, alternatives, and important trade-offs in the decision. This work often takes a co-production approach, where we work together as a group to understand the problem, build science products, and improve decision-support products in an iterative fashion. End products include reports, science articles, and dynamic computer applications that, for example, use predictive models to estimate how well alternatives might achieve different objectives during decisions.

My work is collaborative in nature and I rely on diverse teams of students, post-docs, scientists, experts, and decision makers. Together, we create well-rounded teams that work collaboratively to understand problems, build products, and communicate actionable science to decision makers.

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