
people
ecologists
Bud Freeman
Mary Freeman
Tim Carter
Megan Hagler
Carrie Straight
|
Bud Freeman (Ecology)
bud@ttrout.ecology.uga.edu
(706) 583-0978
Bud Freeman is a Senior Public Service Associate at the Odum School of Ecology and the Director of the Georgia Museum of Natural History.
He received his Ph.D. from The University of Georgia. His areas
of resarch include the distribution and abundance of fishes endemic
to southeastern systems, in the context of preserving species diversity,
and function in streams and rivers increasingly affected by human
population development; quantifying basin characteristics in southeastern
watersheds harboring remnant endemic communities; systematics and
taxonomy of southeastern freshwater fishes.
|
|
| |
|
|
Mary Freeman (U.S.G.S./Ecology)
mary@ttrout.ecology.uga.edu
(706) 542-5181
Mary Freeman is an Assistant Research Ecologist with the U.S.G.S./B.R.D.
She received her PhD from The University of Georgia. Her areas of
research include river ecology and management; effects of altering
streamflow and instream habitat on biological processes that sustain
the diversity and abundances of native riverine fauna.
|

|
| |
|
|
Tim Carter, Urban Ecologist
tlcarter@gmail.com
(706) 542-7665
Tim Carter is a post doctoral researcher, working on the Etowah Habitat Conservation Plan, the Initiative for Watershed Excellence: Upper Altamaha Pilot Project, and various coastal issues. He received his PhD in Ecology from the University of Georgia. His dissertation research focused on the use of green roofs for stormwater management. |
|
| |
|
Megan Hagler, Research Professional
megan@ttrout.ecology.uga.edu
(706) 542 6032
Megan Hagler works as a researcher and lab manager in the Freeman Lab. Her main research interests include distributions and life history strategies of endemic fishes, quantitative approaches to monitoring fish populations, and preservation of biotic diversity in watersheds with changing land-use. Ongoing projects involve estimating capture efficiency of Cherokee darters in small streams, assessing the degree with which culverts of different designs are fragmenting stream fish populations by presenting barriers to fish passage through a mark-recapture approach, and water quality monitoring across the Etowah and Conasauga watersheds. Megan received her BS and MS in Ecology from UGA. Her thesis research related micro-habitat features and natural flow variability in the Etowah River to the probability of occurrence of young-of-year and adult shoal-dependent species, including three imperiled fishes, the amber darter, undescribed Coosa madtom, and undescribed Coosa chub. |
|
| |
|
|
Carrie Straight, Research Professional
carrie@ttrout.ecology.uga.edu
(706) 542-4137
Carrie Straight is a researcher and database manager for the Freeman Lab. She creates GIS products for River Basin Center and the Georgia Museum of Natural History. Her research interests include reproduction and behavior of robust redhorse (Moxostoma robustum) and other large-bodied catostomids. Past projects include studying the exotic Asian swamp eel (Monopterus sp. cf. M. albus) at the Chattahoochee Nature Center and Aquatic GAP, diversity analysis for the Upper Coosa Basins. Ongoing projects include the creation of an online freshwater fish distribution atlas for Georgia in cooperation with the Georgia Natural Heritage Program. Carrie received her MS from UGA's Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources with a focus on the effects of experimental prey reduction on the foraging behavior of insectivorous nearctic-neotropical migrant birds in West Virginia and is currently a PhD student at the Odum School of Ecology, University of Georgia. |
|
| |
|
 |