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Amanda Rodewald

How Invasive and Exotic Shrubs Affect Breeding Birds

Invasive non-native shrubs can have serious, although not immediately obvious, negative impacts on birds.  Amanda will explore the full range of impacts on some of the most dominant invasive non-native shrubs on our native and breeding bird populations in the northeast. 

About Amanda Rodewald P.h.D. 

Garvin Professor, Natural Resources and the Environment

Senior Director of the Center for Avian Population Studies, Laboratory of Ornithology, Cornell University

Prior to joining Cornell in 2013, she spent 13 years as a professor at Ohio State University.  Dr. Rodewald received a B.S. in Wildlife Biology from University of Montana, a M.S. in Zoology from University of Arkansas, and a PhD in Ecology from Pennsylvania State University.  Her interdisciplinary research integrates population, community, and landscape ecology with conservation biology and sustainability science, and uses community science, big data, and computational modeling to understand and address conservation challenges in temperate and tropical landscapes.  At Cornell, Dr. Rodewald also serves on the Faculty Advisory Board of the Cornell Atkinson Center for Sustainability.

Since 2000, Dr. Rodewald has generated more than $9 million in research funding and has published over 170 scientific papers, an Ornithology textbook, 10 book chapters, and over 60 popular articles and commentaries, including bimonthly pieces for The Hill, a news source for politicians and advisors on Capitol Hill.   Dr. Rodewald is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) and the American Ornithological Society.  She has previously served on the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Science Advisory Board and Ecological Processes and Effects Committee, and she chaired the SAB panel reviewing the Waters of the US report. Her national leadership roles also include serving on the Scientific Review Committee of the National Socio-environmental Synthesis Center and the nominating committee of AAAS.  She also has presented at Congressional briefings and hearings on legislative matters related to conservation and environmental protection.  Dr. Rodewald aligns her research and outreach efforts in ways that support policy and management, and she regularly collaborates with and/or advises partners in government agencies, NGOs, and the private sector. 

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