cv section 1: employment history/awards - …methods for studying cause-specific senescence in the...

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CURRICULUM VITAE CV SECTION 1: Employment History/Awards NAME ADDRESS Dr. Lise M. Aubry, Assistant Professor Fish, Wildlife and Conservation Biology Wagar Building, Colorado State University Fort Collins, CO 80523-1474 Email: [email protected] Phone: 970 491 5122 Web: http://liseaubry.webs.com/ EDUCATION 2009 Ph.D. in Evolutionary ecology. Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, MPIDR (Germany) & the University Paul Sabatier UPS (France) 2005-2008 International Max Planck Research School for Demography: IMPRS fellow 2005-2006 European Doctoral School for Demography: EDSD fellow 2005 M.S. in Biology, Ecology and Evolution (2nd year), University Paul Sabatier 2004 D.E.S.U. (Superior Studies in Ecology), University Paul Sabatier 2003 M.S. in Ecology (1st Year), Concordia University, Montréal (Canada) 2002 B.S. in Biology, University Paul Sabatier ACADEMIC POSITIONS 2017 – Present Assistant Professor, Fish Wildlife & Conservation, Colorado State University 2015 – 2017 Assistant Professor, Wildland Resource Department, Utah State University 2012 – 2015 Research Assistant Professor, Wildland Resource Department, USU AFFILIATIONS 2017 – Present Assistant Professor, Graduate Degree Program in Ecology, CSU 2013 – 2014 Visiting Scholar, CNRS CEFE, France OTHER POSITIONS 2011 – 2012 NSF Postdoctoral Fellow, Wildland Resource Department, USU 2009 – 2011 Berryman Postdoctoral Fellow, Berryman Institute, USU CURRENT JOB DESCRIPTION 35%Teaching / 55% Research/Creative Activity / 10% Service/Outreach / 0% Admin HONORS AND AWARDS FELLOWSHIPS & AWARDS (~$140,000) 2016 Utah Agricultural Experiment Station, Travel Grant to attend the 2016 Evolutionary Demography Meeting in Charlottesville, VA: $500 2016 USU Ecology Center, Travel Grant to attend the Evolutionary Demography Meeting in Charlottesville, VA: $800 2014 Center for Woman and Gender: $500 2013 CNR USU professional development grant, Travel to participate in the “Integral Projection Models and IPMpack” in Odense, Denmark: $500 2012 Center for Woman and Gender, USU, Travel grant: $500

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Page 1: CV SECTION 1: Employment History/Awards - …Methods for studying cause-specific senescence in the wild. For Methods in Ecology and Evolution, 5(9): 924–93. IF = 5.322 19. Koons

CURRICULUM VITAE

CV SECTION 1: Employment History/Awards NAME ADDRESS Dr. Lise M. Aubry, Assistant Professor Fish, Wildlife and Conservation Biology Wagar Building, Colorado State University Fort Collins, CO 80523-1474 Email: [email protected] Phone: 970 491 5122 Web: http://liseaubry.webs.com/ EDUCATION 2009 Ph.D. in Evolutionary ecology. Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, MPIDR (Germany)

& the University Paul Sabatier UPS (France) 2005-2008 International Max Planck Research School for Demography: IMPRS fellow 2005-2006 European Doctoral School for Demography: EDSD fellow 2005 M.S. in Biology, Ecology and Evolution (2nd year), University Paul Sabatier 2004 D.E.S.U. (Superior Studies in Ecology), University Paul Sabatier 2003 M.S. in Ecology (1st Year), Concordia University, Montréal (Canada) 2002 B.S. in Biology, University Paul Sabatier ACADEMIC POSITIONS 2017 – Present Assistant Professor, Fish Wildlife & Conservation, Colorado State University 2015 – 2017 Assistant Professor, Wildland Resource Department, Utah State University 2012 – 2015 Research Assistant Professor, Wildland Resource Department, USU AFFILIATIONS 2017 – Present Assistant Professor, Graduate Degree Program in Ecology, CSU 2013 – 2014 Visiting Scholar, CNRS CEFE, France OTHER POSITIONS 2011 – 2012 NSF Postdoctoral Fellow, Wildland Resource Department, USU 2009 – 2011 Berryman Postdoctoral Fellow, Berryman Institute, USU CURRENT JOB DESCRIPTION 35%Teaching / 55% Research/Creative Activity / 10% Service/Outreach / 0% Admin HONORS AND AWARDS FELLOWSHIPS & AWARDS (~$140,000)

2016 Utah Agricultural Experiment Station, Travel Grant to attend the 2016 Evolutionary Demography Meeting in Charlottesville, VA: $500

2016 USU Ecology Center, Travel Grant to attend the Evolutionary Demography Meeting in Charlottesville, VA: $800

2014 Center for Woman and Gender: $500 2013 CNR USU professional development grant, Travel to participate in the “Integral Projection Models

and IPMpack” in Odense, Denmark: $500 2012 Center for Woman and Gender, USU, Travel grant: $500

Page 2: CV SECTION 1: Employment History/Awards - …Methods for studying cause-specific senescence in the wild. For Methods in Ecology and Evolution, 5(9): 924–93. IF = 5.322 19. Koons

2009-2010 Berryman Institute Postdoctoral fellowship: $80,000 2010 Travel award, First World Seabird Conference, Victoria, Canada: $1,200 2008 ATUPS Travel fellowship award, France: $2,500 2005-2008 Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Ph.D. scholarship: $50,800 2004-2005 Institut de Recherche sur les Grands Mammiferes, Institut Nationale de Recherche Agronomique,

France, M.S. scholarship : $3,800 AWARDS TO ADVISEES (~$173,000) 2018 Rachel Kanaziz, NSF-GRF recipient: $105,000 2017 Caylee Falvo, GDPE Small Grants for Graduate Research: $2,197 2017 Caylee Falvo, small FWCB Graduate School Recruitment Fellowship: $520 2017 Caylee Falvo, Apacheria Audubon Fellowship: $800 2017 Caylee Falvo, USU graduate enhancement award: $4,000 2017 Jarod Raithel, USU graduate enhancement award: $4,000 2016 Lucas Henzler, Undergraduate Research Creative Opportunity fellowship: $2,000 2016 Jarod Raithel, Robins Award, Graduate Instructor of the Year, institution-wide competition. 2016 Jarod Raithel, QCNR Graduate Instructor of the Year, $400 2016 Jarod Raithel, Ecology Center travel grant, $500 2016 Jarod Raithel, Department of Wildland Resource travel grant, $500 2015 Kari Norman: Undergraduate Research and Creative Opportunities: $2,000 2013-2017 Jarod Raithel, USU Presidential Doctoral Fellowship: $52,000

CV SECTION 2: Publications/Scholarly Record

PUBLISHED WORKSRefereed Journal Articles: *senior author, **equal contribution, *** advised graduate student

Peer-reviewed manuscripts submitted or under review

1. Falvo C.***, Koons D.N., French S.S. and L.M. Aubry*. Climate change impacts on a hibernator’s survival: a 50-year perspective. For the Journal of Mammalogy. Ecology and Evolution (submitted). IF = 3.14

2. Raithel J.D.***, Reynolds-Hogland M., Koons D.N., Carr P., and L.M. Aubry*. The doughnut effect: black bear behavioral responses to fear in a wildland-urban interface in the Mid-Atlantic United States. Biological Conservation (invited to resubmit). IF = 3.562

3. Falvo C.***, French S.S., Webb A., and L.M. Aubry*. The cost of immunity in the wild: elevation shapes distinct life history trade-offs in a sub-alpine hibernator. Oecologia (submitted). IF = 5.21

Manuscripts in preparation

4. Jenouvrier S., Aubry L.M., Barbraud C., Weimerskirch H. and H. Caswell. Selection spells on Southern Fulmar life histories: extreme climatic events increase individual heterogeneity. For Nature Climate Change.

5. Aubry L.M., Iles D., Gimenez O., Choquet R., Rockwell R., and D.N. Koons. The curious disappearance of cohort effects: robustness to natal habitat degradation in an over-abundant species. For Journal of Animal Ecology.

6. Koons D.N., Aubry L.M., and R.F. Rockwell. Adaptive insight into the effects of harvest on overabundant snow geese. For the Journal of Wildlife Management.

7. Cam E., Authier M., Aubry L.M., Jaffré M., Sallé L., Monnat J.-Y., Link W.A., Pradel R., and O. Gimenez. Age, experience, clutch size and demographic heterogeneity in female kittiwakes: effects and effect sizes revisited. For Ecology.

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8. Aubry L.M., Choquet R., Gimenez O., Rockwell R. and D.N. Koons. Long-term consequences of early-life environmental conditions in lesser snow geese. For Proceedings of the Royal Society Biological Series.

Peer-reviewed journal articles published or in press

9. Jenouvrier S., Aubry L.M., Barbraud C., Weimerskirch H. and H. Caswell (2018). Frailty in vital rates unravels a

diversity of life histories in an Antarctic seabird population. Journal of Animal Ecology. DOI: 10.1111/1365-

2656.12752. IF = 4.733

10. Mullins M.***, and L.M. Aubry* (2018). Impacts of Road Closure, Climate, and Vegetation Change on Elk demography. The Intermountain Journal of Science (accepted). IF = 0.5

11. Raithel J.D***., Reynolds-Hogland M.J., Carr P.C., and L.M. Aubry* (2017). Why Does the Regulated Harvest of Black Bears Affect the Rate of Human-Bear Conflicts in New Jersey? Case Studies in the Environment, https://doi.org/10.1525/cse.2017.sc.415535

12. Authier M., Aubry L.M.**, and E. Cam (2017). Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing: Model Misspecification Undermines Tests of The Neutral Theory for Life Histories. Ecology and Evolution, 7(10): 3348–3361, IF = 2.537

13. Raithel J.D***, Reynolds-Hogland M., Koons D.N., Carr P., and L.M. Aubry* (2017). Recreational harvest and incident-response protocols reduce human-carnivore conflicts in an anthropogenic landscape. Journal of Applied Ecology, 54(5): 1552-1562. IF = 4.564.

14. Cam E., Aubry L.M.**, and M. Authier (2016). The conundrum of heterogeneity in life histories Trends in Ecology and Evolution, 31(11): 872–886, IF = 16.196.

15. First and last author contributed equally. Wolfe M.L., Gese E., Stoner D., Terletzky P., and L.M. Aubry** (2016). Evaluation of harvest indices for cougar management in Utah. Journal of Wildlife Management, 80(1): 27-36. IF = 1.726.

16. First and last author contributed equally. Wolfe, M. L., Koons, D. N., Stoner, D. C., Terletzky, P., Gese, E. M., Choate, D. M., & Aubry, L. M.** (2015). Is anthropogenic cougar mortality compensated by changes in natural mortality in Utah? Insight from long-term studies. Biological Conservation, 182: 187-196. IF = 3.562.

17. Dowd J.B., Gese E. and L.M. Aubry* (2014). Winter space use of coyotes in high-elevation environments: behavioral adaptation to deep snow. Journal of Ethology, 32: 29-41. IF = 0.79

18. Koons D.N., Gamelon M., Gaillard J.M., Aubry L.M., Rockwell R.F., and O. Gimenez (2014). Methods for studying cause-specific senescence in the wild. For Methods in Ecology and Evolution, 5(9): 924–93. IF = 5.322

19. Koons D.N., Rockwell R.F. and L.M. Aubry (2014). Effects of exploitation on a native invasive species: the lesser snow goose dilemma. Journal of Animal Ecology, 83(2): 365–374. IF = 4.726

20. Aubry L.M., Rockwell R.F., Cooch E.G., Brook R., Mulder C., and D.N. Koons (2013). Climate change, phenology and habitat degradation: drivers of gosling body condition and juvenile survival in lesser snow geese. Global Change Biology, 19(1): 149-160. IF = 8.224

21. Dowd J.B., Gese E. and L.M. Aubry* (2013). Coyote movements into lynx winter habitat: snowmobile trails as a driver for inter-specific competition? Plos One, DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0082862. IF = 3.534

22. Cam E., Gimenez O., Alpizar-Jara R., Aubry L.M., Authier M., Cooch E.G., Koons D.N., Link W.A., Monnat J.-Y., Nichols J.D., Rotella J.J., Royle J.A., R. Pradel (2013) Looking for a needle on a haystack: inference about individual fitness components in a heterogeneous population. Oikos, 122: 739-753. IF = 3.559

23. Berg N.D., Gese E.M., Squires J.R. and L.M. Aubry* (2012) Influence of forest structure on abundance of lynx prey species in western Wyoming. Journal of Wildlife Management, 76(7): 1480-1488. IF = 1.64

24. Aubry L.M., Cam E., Koons D.N., Monnat J.-Y. and P. Samuel (2011) The role of unobserved and observed heterogeneity in shaping survival in a long-lived seabird. Journal of Animal Ecology, 80(2): 375-383. IF = 4.754

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25. Verheyden H., Aubry L.M., Merlet J., Petibon P., Chauveau-Duriot B., Guillon N., Duncan P (2011) Faecal nitrogen, an index of diet quality in roe deer Capreolus capreolus? Wildlife Biology, 17: 166- 175. IF = 0.989

26. Cam E. and L.M. Aubry** (2011) Early condition, recruitment and reproductive trajectory in long lived birds. Journal of Ornithology, 152:187-201. IF = 1.632

27. Aubry L.M., Rockwell R., and D.N. Koons (2010). Metapopulation dynamics of mid-continent lesser snow geese: implications for management. Human Wildlife Interactions, 4(2): 11-32.

28. Aubry L.M., Koons D.N., Monnat J.-Y. and E. Cam (2009). Consequences of recruitment decisions and heterogeneity on age-specific breeding success in a long-lived seabird. Ecology, 90(9): 2491- 2502. IF = 4.411

29. Aubry L.M., Cam E. and J.-Y. Monnat (2009) Habitat selection, age-specific recruitment, and reproductive success in a long-lived seabird, the black-legged kittiwake; In Modeling demographic processes in marked populations series, Environmental and Ecological Statistics, 3:365-392. IF = 1.47

Other (e.g. lab texts, book reviews, technical reports, in‐house reports):

Agency Reports

▪ Aubry L.M., French S.S., and D. Eifler (2018). Demographic and physiological monitoring of the Colorado checkered whiptail on Fort Carson, Colorado: An integrated conservation approach. Annual Report for USFWS (in prep).

▪ Wolfe M., Gese E., Terletzky P., Stoner D., and L.M. Aubry* (2014). Evaluation of harvest indices currently used for cougar management in Utah: Oquirrh-Stansbury and Monroe Units as case studies. Utah Division of Wildland resources.

Theses & Dissertation

▪ Aubry L.M. (2009). Influence of recruitment decisions and reproductive investment on the age-specific demography of a long-lived seabird: Implications for senescence. PhD Dissertation, collaboration: MPIDR, Rostock, Germany / UPS, Toulouse, France

▪ Aubry L.M. (2005) Spatial structure of the Roe deer’s dietary quality (Capreolus capreolus) in a fragmented landscape; Master Thesis, UPS, Toulouse, France

▪ Aubry L.M. (2004) Habitat selection and age at first reproduction in a long-lived species of seabird, the black legged Kittiwake (Rissa tridactyla); DESU Thesis, UPS, Toulouse, France

CONTRACTS & GRANTS (~$1.700,000) Externally‐Funded and Submitted Projects as PI 2018 Towards Sustainable Carnivore-Human Interactions in the Anthropocene: a Case Study of

New Jersey Black Bears. $29,885. National Geographic Society – Explorer Grant. L.M. Aubry & S. Spear (equal contributors). Submitted. Not included in sum total.

2018-2019 Demography and stress physiology of the Colorado checkered whiptail at the edge of its

range, implications for its conservation on DoD lands (Phase 2). (Fort Carson and the Piñon Canyon Maneuver Site, Colorado). $100,000 to L.M. Aubry (PI), S.S. French (Co-PI). Accepted

2018 Impacts of climate on the viability of Rocky Mountain National Park’s hibernators

$8,459 research proposal submitted to the Lois Webster Fund by L.M. Aubry (PI). Rejected. Not included in sum total.

2018 Impacts of climate on the viability of Rocky Mountain National Park’s hibernators: Guiding

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conservation through the monitoring of sentinel species. $49,924 research proposal submitted to Rocky Mountain National Park by L.M. Aubry (PI). Rejected. Not included in sum total.

2017-2018 Demography and stress physiology of the Colorado checkered whiptail at the edge of its

range, implications for its conservation on DoD lands (Phase 1). (Fort Carson and the Piñon Canyon Maneuver Site, Colorado). $140,000 to L.M. Aubry (PI), S.S. French (Co-PI).

2015-2017 Eco-evolutionary responses to climate change in a plant-herbivore system: an

interdisciplinary approach. Utah Agricultural Experiment Station: $113,007 to L.M. Aubry (PI).

2013-2016 Adaptive responses of Uinta ground squirrels to climate change: learning from a hibernating indicator species. National Geographic Explorer grant: $19,995 to L.M. Aubry (PI), Susannah French (Co-PI), and Scott Bernhardt (Co-PI).

2013-2017 Black bear population dynamics and management. Bear trust international, Nelson Farms, &

the New Jersey Division of Fish & Wildlife: $28,000 to L.M. Aubry (PI). 2013-2014 Cougar population dynamics in Utah, implications for management. Utah Division of Wildlife

Resources: $19,734 to L.M. Aubry (PI).

Externally‐Funded Projects as CoPI

2018 The Interplay Between Host Diet, Immunity Reproduction and the microbiome across an anthropogenic-disturbed landscape. NSF-IOS program. ~$1.045,686 collaborative proposal lead by Susannah French (PI), L.M. Aubry (Co-PI).

Internally‐Funded Awards

2012-2013 Adaptive responses to climate change in our backyard: Drivers of life history variation in the Uinta ground squirrel. Research Catalyst, Utah State University: $19,880 to L.M. Aubry (PI), Susannah French (Co-PI), and Scott Bernhardt (Co-PI).

Funding Sponsorships

2011-2012 Long-term demographic effects of early-life environmental conditions in lesser snow geese (PI: David Koons, Co-PIs: Olivier Gimenez, Robert Rockwell). NSF-DEB, Population and Community Ecology Cluster: $80,000 to L.M. Aubry (Postdoctoral fellow).

2009-2010 Relative impacts of policy change and human harvest on lesser snow goose population

dynamics (PI: Lise Aubry, Co-PI: David Koons). Berryman institute. $80,000 to L.M. Aubry

(Postdoctoral fellow).

2005-2008 Trade-offs and individual heterogeneity in long-lived organisms (in collaboration with

Emmanuelle Cam and Jean-Yves Monnat). Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research.

$50,800 to L.M. Aubry (PhD fellow).

PAPERS PRESENTED/SYMPOSIA/INVITED LECTURES/PROFESSIONAL MEETINGS/WORKSHOPS Invited Lectures

2018 University of Missouri, Biology Department. “Individual Heterogeneity in Life Histories within the Context of Environmental Change: Implications for Conservation”. September 10-12th, Columbia, Missouri.

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2017 Département de biologie, Université du Québec à Rimouski. “Of Geese, Bears, and Squirrels: A Tale of Individual Heterogeneity in Life Histories”. August 30th, Rimouski QC, Canada.

2016 Fish, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology Department, Colorado State University. “Ecological and Evolutionary perspectives on the role individual heterogeneity plays in shaping life histories”. November 30th, Fort Collins CO.

2016 Restoring the West Conference. Wildlife response to climate change in the Western US: Learning from indicator species. October 19th, USU, Logan, UT.

2016 Responses to climate change in the wild: learning from indicator species. Climate Change Workshop for Teachers at Utah's Hogle Zoo, “Weather, Water, Wildlands and Community: Teaching Climate Change in Utah”, sponsored by NOAA. https://www.climate.gov/teaching/professional-development/climate-education-workshop-salt-lake-city-ut. June 15th, Salt Lake City, UT.

2015 Ecological and evolutionary responses to environmental change: from individuals to populations. University of Nevada, Reno, NV.

2015 Departmental seminar, Utah State University, College of Natural Resources, Logan, UT.

2014 Some demographic approaches to conservation dilemmas. CNRS, Centre d’Ecologie Fonctionnelle et Evolutive, Montpellier, France.

2013 Evolutionary demography & wildlife management: two sides of the same coin. Ecology Center Interdisciplinary Lunch, Utah State University, Logan, UT.

2011 Long-term demography and the evolutionary ecology of senescence: the case of a long-lived seabird. Ecology, Evolution, and Conservation Biology Colloquium series, University of Nevada, Reno, NV.

2011 Individual variability in life histories: implications for management. Departmental Series, Utah State University, Logan, UT.

2005 Habitat selection and age at first reproduction in a long-lived species of seabird (Rissa tridactyla), Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Rostock, Germany.

2005 Spatial structure of the Roe deer’s dietary quality (C. capreolus) in a fragmented landscape, Evolution et Diversité Biologique, Université Paul Sabatier, Toulouse, France.

2005 Spatial structure of the Roe deer’s dietary quality (C. capreolus) in a fragmented landscape, CNRS Centre D’Etude Biologique de Chizé, France.

2004 Habitat selection and age at first reproduction in a long-lived species of seabird (Rissa tridactyla), Evolution et Diversité Biologique, Toulouse, France.

Invited Symposia

2016 Graduate Student Association of the Ecosystem Science and Management Department at Texas A&M University on the theme of "Disturbance in the Anthropocene: a multi-ecosystem perspective". November 15th, College Station, TX.

2015 Keynote speaker: 4th annual Program in Ecology Student Symposium. University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY. Presentation at professional meetings

2018 Authier M., Aubry L.M., and E. Cam. Model Misspecification Undermines Tests of The Neutral Theory for Life Histories. International Statistical Ecology Conference. St Andrews, UK, 2-6 July 2018.

2018 Jenouvrier S., Aubry L.M., and H. Caswell. When the going gets tough, the though get going. Evolutionary Demography Meeting, January 2nd-6th, Lyon, France.

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2017 Aubry L.M. & Raithel J.D. Ecology and dynamics of human-bear conflicts. British Ecological Society Meeting. December 11th-14th, Ghent, Belgium.

2016 Jenouvrier S., Aubry L.M. (presenter), and H. Caswell. Evolutionary Demography Meeting. Unobserved heterogeneity in vital rates creates a diversity of life history ‘complexes’ in an Antarctic seabird population. October 4th, University of Virginia, VA.

2015 Authier M., Aubry L.M., Cam E. How (Not) to Test Demographic Heterogeneity with The Neutral Theory of Life Histories. University of Toulouse III, Evolution et Diversite Biologique, 27 October 2015, Toulouse, France.

2014 Cam E., Authier M., Link W., Aubry L.M., Monnat J.-Y Variation in fitness components and demographic heterogeneity in female kittiwakes: effects and effect sizes revisited. Joint 2014 Annual Meeting British Ecological Society and Société Française d’Ecologie, 9-12 December, Grand Palais, Lille, France.

2013 Aubry L.M., Koons D.N., Gimenez O. and R.F. Rockwell. Consequences of early-life environment on senescence in the wild. Evolutionary Demography Society First Annual Meeting, 6-10 October 2013, Odense, Denmark.

2013 Koons D.N., Aubry L.M., Gimenez O. and R.F. Rockwell. Ageing in the wild: senescence in cause-specific mortality when detection is imperfect. Evolutionary Demography Society First Annual Meeting, 6-10 October 2013, Odense, Denmark.

2013 Aubry L.M., Rockwell R.F., Cooch E.G., Brook R., Mulder C., and D.N. Koons. Climate change, phenology and habitat degradation: drivers of gosling body condition and juvenile survival in lesser snow geese. North American Duck Symposium, 27-31 January 2013, Memphis, Tennessee.

2012 Rockwell R.F. and L.M. Aubry. The Hudson Bay Project. Central Flyway Meeting, 26 February-3 March 2012. Grand Island, Nebraska.

2011 Aubry L.M., Cooch E.G.C., Rockwell R.F., and D.N. Koons. Compensatory versus additive mortality in lesser snow geese: implications for population control. 12th North American Arctic Goose Conference, 11-15 January 2011, Portland, Oregon.

2011 Koons D.N., Rockwell R.F., and L.M. Aubry. The Implications of metapopulation dynamics for the management of mid-continent Lesser Snow Geese. 12th North American Arctic Goose Conference, 11-15 January 2011, Portland, Oregon.

2010 Aubry L.M., Cam E., Monnat J.-Y., Pavard S., and D.N. Koons. Trade-offs in the black-legged kittiwake. The First World Seabird Conference, 7-12 September 2010, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.

2010 Aubry L.M., Rockwell R.F., and D.N. Koons. Metapopulation dynamics of Mid-continent Lesser Snow Geese: Implications for management. Berryman Institute Symposium, 10-12 May 2010, Logan, Utah, USA.

2007 Aubry L.M., Cam E., and J.-Y. Monnat. Habitat selection, age-specific recruitment and consequences on reproductive success: a long-term study of black-legged Kittiwakes. EURING technical meeting, 14-20 January 2007, Dunedin, New Zealand.

Outreach presentations & Other

2016 Aubry L.M. Responses to Climate Change in the Wild: Learning from indicator species. Climate Change Workshop for Teachers at Utah's Hogle Zoo, sponsored by NOAA. May 23, Salt Lake City, UT.

2016 Aubry L.M. UDWR-USU Brown Bag Luncheon Seminar. Demographic Approaches to Wildlife Conservation and Management Dilemmas. March 1st, Salt Lake City, UT.

2014 Aubry L.M., French S.S., Meier C., and S.A. Bernhardt. Adaptive responses to climate change in a hibernator: ecological and evolutionary drivers of persistence. June 9th 2014, Natural History Museum, Salt Lake City, UT.

Student presentations & posters

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2018 Falvo, C.A. (MS student), A. Webb, S.S. French, and L.M. Aubry. Immunity and growth trade-offs vary with elevation in a hibernating mammal. SICB Annual Meeting, January 3-7, San Francisco, CA.

2017 Falvo, C.A. (MS student), A. Webb, S.S. French, and L.M. Aubry. Immunity and growth trade-offs vary with elevation in a hibernating small mammal. 97th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Mammalogists, June 20-24th, Moscow ID.

2017 Falvo, C.A. (MS student), A. Webb, S.S. French, and L.M. Aubry. Life history trade-offs across climate gradients in a small mammal. Utah State University Department of Wildland Resources Graduate Research Symposium, Logan UT.

2017 Falvo, C.A. (MS student), A. Webb, S.S. French, and L.M. Aubry. Life history trade-offs across climate gradients in a small hibernating mammal. Poster, Utah State University Research Week, Logan UT.

2016 Henzler, L. (undergraduate advisee), Falvo, C. (MS student), and L.M. Aubry. Impacts of climate change on the fitness of an indicator species, the Uinta ground squirrel. The Wildlife Society Wyoming Chapter meeting, November 15-17th, Cody WY.

2016 Raithel, J.D. (PhD student) […] and L.M. Aubry. Recreational harvest and incident-response protocols reduce human-carnivore conflicts in an anthropogenic landscape. Ecological Society of America Annual Meeting, August 7th – 12th, Fort Lauderdale FL.

2016 Raithel, J.D. (PhD student) […] and L.M. Aubry. Recreational harvest and incident-response protocols reduce human-carnivore conflicts in an anthropogenic landscape. 24th International Conference on Bear Research and Management, June 12th-16th, Anchorage AK.

2016 Norman, K. (undergraduate advisee) and L.M. Aubry. Demographic Consequences of Climate Change in a Hibernator, the Uinta Ground Squirrel. Utah State Student Research Symposium, April, Logan UT.

2016 Norman, K. (undergraduate advisee) and L.M. Aubry. Demographic Consequences of Climate Change in the Uinta Ground Squirrel. Research on Capitol Hill, January, Salt Lake City UT.

2015 Raithel, J.D. (PhD student). What I Wished I Knew – The Importance of Your Graduate Cohort. Presenter at Graduate Training Series Seminar (GrTS), September, Utah State University, Logan UT

2015 Raithel, J.D. (PhD student). What exactly is an ‘urban bear? Characterizing black bear space use across an anthropogenic landscape gradient. USU Research Week, April 9th, Utah State University, Logan UT.

2014 Raithel, J.D. (PhD student). Integrating Black Bear Behavior, Spatial Ecology and Population Dynamics across an Anthropogenic Landscape Gradient. WILD Department’s Pre-Project Symposium, April 18th, Utah State University, Logan UT.

2014 Raithel, J.D. (PhD student). Infinity in the Palm of your Hand.” TEDxUSU Event, October, Utah State University, Logan UT: http://tedx.usu.edu/event/jarod-raithel/

2014 Raithel, J.D. (PhD student). Science and Storytelling: Wonder, Humility, Gratitude and Interconnectedness. USU’s Ignite! Seminar Series, April, Utah State University, Logan UT: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V6skjb1L1EU

Workshop Participation 2018 CSU IACUC online training 2017 CSU Search Committee Chair Training 2017 CSU Search Committee Member Training 2017 TILT: “Best Practices: Theoretical Foundations of Online Courses” (Course 2) 2017 CSU Early career investigator training 2017 CSU Harassment training certificate 2017 CSU Administrative task training (e.g. Pcard, Kuali, Intranet) 2017 CSU New faculty orientation 2016 Bayesian integrated population modeling. M. Schaub, M. Kery, and D. Koons. USU, Logan, UT.

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2016 Individual stochasticity: demographic models and analysis. H. Caswell. University of Virginia, VA. 2016 Approaches to population modeling using IPMs. R. Salguero-Gomez. University of Virginia, VA. 2014 Find your once-in-20-years student every year workshop, USU, Logan UT 2014 Research Financial and Administrative Series Training, USU, Logan UT 2014 The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act training, USU, Logan UT 2013 Integral Projection Models and IPMpack: EvoDemoS, Odense, Denmark 2012-13 New Faculty Teaching Academy, USU, Logan UT 2012 Bayesian Statistics, USU, Logan UT 2012 Write winning grant proposals, USU, Logan UT 2010 Research Scholars Certification Program, USU, Logan UT 2009 Second workshop in Biodemography, Stanford CA 2008 Workshop in Quantitative Genetics: MPIDR, Rostock, Germany 2007 Workshop: from uncertain age estimates to age-specific life history schedules, MPIDR, Germany 2006 International Workshop on the Evolutionary Demography of Aging, MPIDR, Rostock, Germany

CV SECTION 3: Evidence of Teaching and Advising Effectiveness TEACHING I have developed a number of online classes for undergraduate and graduate students. I enjoy teaching quantitative topics to students interested in population ecology, general ecology, evolutionary biology, wildlife management, conservation, data management, programming, and statistics. Although I mostly teach online classes, I also enjoy teaching in the classroom and have delivered a number of guest lectures for colleagues in the College of Natural Resources. In-Classroom Instruction

• Design of Fish and Wildlife Projects (CSU, FW 370, 3 credits, 66 students): Undergraduate class, Fall 2018. Upcoming.

• Design of Fish and Wildlife Projects (CSU, FW 370, 3 credits, 49 students): Undergraduate class, Spring 2018. I am teaching this class for the first time and hope to flip it down the road (i.e. hybrid between online and in classroom teaching).

Online Instruction (class size ranged from 15 to 25 students)

• Monitoring and Assessment in Natural Resource and Environmental Management (USU, WILD 4750, 3 credits): Undergraduate class, Fall 2015, Fall 2016.

• Plant and Animal Populations (USU, WILD 3810, 3 credits): Undergraduate class, Spring 2015-17.

• Basic Statistics and Programming for Natural Resource Managers (USU, NR 6580, 3 credits): Masters of Natural Resources, taught every spring.

• Ecology of Animal Populations (USU, WILD 6900, 3 credits): Masters of Natural Resources Guest Lecturer

• New-to-the-Major Seminar (FW 179), CSU, Fall 2018

• New-to-the-Major Seminar (FW 179), CSU, Spring 2018

• New-to-the-Major Seminar (FW 179), CSU, Fall 2017

• Natural Resources professional orientation (NR 2000), USU, Spring 2017

• Natural Resources professional orientation (NR 2000), USU, Fall 2016

• Monitoring and Assessment in Natural Resource and Environmental Management (WILD 4750), USU, Fall 2014, Fall 2016

• Ecology of Animal Populations (WILD 6400), USU, Fall 2008, 2010, Fall 2011

• Plant and Animal Populations (WILD 3810), USU, Spring 2009

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TEACHING EFFECTIVENESS Course Syllabi, Assignments, and Other Materials Please find attached:

• A syllabus for FW370 (fall 2018).

• Student evaluations for FW370 taught at CSU (spring 2018).

• Teaching peer-review evaluations.

• CSU student course surveys.

• IDEA evaluations from past courses taught at USU.

• Past student feedback and accolades. Student Course Surveys

• Design of Fish and Wildlife Projects (CSU, FW 370, 3 credits, 49 students): Undergraduate class. Spring 2018, Fall 2018.

• Monitoring and Assessment in Natural Resource and Environmental Management (3 credits): Undergraduate class, Fall 2015, Fall 2016. Fall 2015 Evaluations: 4.9/5; Top 10th percentile within USU instructors.

• Plant and Animal Populations (3 credits): Undergraduate class, Spring 2015-17. Spring 2017 Evaluations: 4.0/5; Top 40th percentile within USU instructors. Spring 2015 Evaluations: 4.3/5; Top 40th percentile within USU instructors.

• Basic Statistics and Programming for Natural Resource Managers (3 credits): Masters of Natural Resources, taught every spring. Spring 2015 Evaluations: 4.6/5; Top 20th percentile within USU instructors. Spring 2014 Evaluations: 4.9/5; Top 10th percentile within USU instructors. Spring 2013 Evaluations: 4.9/5; Top 10th percentile within USU instructors.

• Ecology of Animal Populations (3 credits): Masters of Natural Resources Spring 2012 Evaluations: 4.5/5; Top 20th percentile within USU instructors.

STUDENT ADVISING/GRADUATE SUPERVISION Undergraduate Students:

2018-present Kaera Utsumi (Undergraduate student, University of California Berkeley). Research: Demography and Conservation of the Colorado checkered whiptail.

2017-Present Sam Hudgens (Undergraduate student, Colorado State University, Honors program). Research:

Mapping human-black bear conflicts. 2015-2016 Lucas Henzler (Undergraduate advisee, Utah State University,) assists with field research and data

entry. Research: “Impacts of climate change on the fitness of an indicator species: the Uinta ground squirrel”.

2014-2016 Kari Norman (Undergraduate research advisee, Honor student & Quinney Fellow, Utah State University). Research: “A hibernator’s response to climate change: ecological drivers of persistence”.

Graduate Degrees Completed Under Your Supervision (past 5 years):

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2016-2018 Caylee Falvo (M.S. student, Colorado State University, Fish, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology & Graduate Degree Program in Ecology). Research: Climate-driven variability in the life history of a hibernating species.

2013-2017 Jarod Raithel (Ph.D. candidate, Utah State University Presidential Fellow, Wildland Resources & the Ecology Center). Research: Integrating black bear behavior spatial ecology, and population dynamics along an anthropogenic gradient: implications for management.

2013-2017 Amanda Christensen (MNR student, Utah State University, MNR program). Research: Relating pre-construction Hawaiian hoary bat activity with post-construction fatalities at four Hawaiian wind farms.

2015-2017 Matthew Mullins (MNR student, Utah State University, MNR program. Research: Assessing the Effectiveness of Access Restrictions to Reduce Wildlife Disturbance in the Gros Ventre Road Corridor.

Current Graduate Advisees:

2018-Present Rachel Kanaziz (M.S. student, Colorado State University, Fish, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology & Graduate Degree Program in Ecology). Research: TBA.

2017-Present Shelley Spear (Ph.D. student, Colorado State University, Fish, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology & Graduate Degree Program in Ecology). Research: Spatio-temporal dynamics of human-black bear conflicts along a wild-urban gradient.

Current Graduate Committee Memberships (excluding those chaired):

• Committee member (since 2017): Rebecca Cheek (PhD, CSU, GDPE)

• Committee member (since 2017): Arianna Punzalan (MS, CSU, GDPE)

• Committee member (since 2017): Emily Virgin (PhD, USU, Biology)

• Committee member (since 2013): Daniel Kinka (PhD, USU, Wildland Resources) Graduate Committee Memberships (for past 5 years, not including those above):

• Committee member, External reviewer (2017): Loreleï Guéry (PhD, Université du Québec à Rimouski, Canada)

• Committee member (2014-2017): Kate Galbreath (PhD, USU, Wildland Resources)

• Committee member (2015-2017): Justin Crump (MS, USU, MNR program)

• Committee member (2014-2017): Michael Robinson (MS, USU, MNR program)

• Committee member (2014-2016): Karen Duncan (MS, USU, MNR program)

• Committee member (2014-2016): Angelique Curtis (MS, USU, MNR program)

• Committee member (2014-2016): Andrew Durso (PhD, USU, Biology)

• Committee member (2014-2016): Joel Ruprecht (MS, USU, Wildland Resources) MENTORING ACTIVITIES 2018-present Kaera Utsumi (Undergraduate student, University of California Berkeley). Research: Demography

and Conservation of the Colorado checkered whiptail. 2017-Present Sam Hudgens (Undergraduate student, Colorado State University, Honors

program). Research: Mapping human-black bear conflicts. Mentored by graduate student Shelley Spear.

OTHER ACTIVITIES/ACCOMPLISHMENTS – TEACHING/ADVISING

Postdoctoral / Research scientists:

• Dr. Douglas Eifler has served as a research scientist and field crew leader in my lab since March 2018. He leads field efforts on the conservation of Colorado checkered whiptails and also advise and trains undergraduate students from underrepresented groups in the field. He has trained ~20 students in the field on this project,

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some of which will potentially join the lab as young undergraduate investigators.

• Dr. Caitlyn Wells will be hosted in my lab as a postdoctoral fellow starting January 2019. Dr. Wells and I share similar research interests and hope to collaborate on a number of questions and projects, notably small mammal research efforts initiated at CSU’s mountain campus.

Off‐campus/Non‐credit Courses:

2018 Informal demonstration of Capture-Mark-Recapture techniques at the CSU Mountain Campus to undergraduate students and volunteers, spring / summer 2018.

2016 Participant in the Climate Change Workshop for Teachers at Utah's Hogle Zoo: “Weather, Water, Wildlands and Community: Teaching Climate Change in Utah” sponsored by NOAA. June 13-16th, Salt Lake City, UT.

2010 Invited Teaching Assistant Taller de Modelos de Captura y Recaptura, 2010, CIMAT, Mexico.

Student Organizations:

• USU Blanding Native American Mentorship program: Advised Native American students from Blanding Campus in the field and in the lab in an effort to expose them to wildlife sciences and ecology, May 2015

CV SECTION 4: Evidence of Outreach/Service

COMMITTEES University Committees:

2018 Spatial Ecologist Search Committee Member

2017 Graduate research proposal reviewer for the CSU-GDPE program

2012-Present I have served on 17 graduate student committees to date

2014-16 Panelist for the USU Undergraduate Research and Creative Opportunities (I reviewed up to 10 research proposal every semester)

Department and College Committees:

2014-2017 At USU, I advised ~25 undergraduate students majoring in wildlife science each year. My responsibilities included helping them with their plan of study, orienting them towards appropriate academic services, and helping them reach their professional and academic goals

External Committees 2017 Reviewer for the prestigious young investigator Elton Prize. The Elton Prize is awarded by the

British Ecological Society each year for the best paper in the Journal of Animal Ecology written by an early career author at the start of their research career.

Since 2018 British Ecological Society – Population Ecology working group Since 2017 Evolutionary Demography Society – Board member PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS AND ACTIVITIES Memberships in Professional Societies:

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• Ecological Society of America (since 2012)

• Evolutionary Demography Society (since 2012)

• British Ecological Society (since 2014)

• World Seabird Union (since 2010)

Review/Editorial Boards:

2014-Present Associate Editor for Journal of Animal Ecology. Impact Factor: 4.474. 2016 ISI Journal Citation

Reports Ranking: 23/153 (Ecology); 3/163 (Zoology). http://www.journalofanimalecology.org/view/0/editorialBoard.html

2016-2018 Associate Editor for Ecology Letters. Impact Factor: 10.689. 2014 ISI Journal Citation Reports Ranking: 4/144 (Ecology). http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1461-0248

Grant Refereeing: 2016-Present Grant Reviewer for the National Geographic Society Explorer grant. 2017 CSU – GDPE program, small research grant reviewer. 2015-2017 I had to declined serving on NSF-GDPE panel as I had students applying for the fellowship 3 years

in a row. 2016 Grant Reviewer for the Hungarian National Research, Development and Innovation Office (NSF-

equivalent in Hungaria) 2012 Grant Reviewer for the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NSF-equivalent in the

Netherlands). Manuscript Refereeing. I have reviewed >150 manuscripts for the following journals: American Naturalist, Ardea, Biological Conservation, Conservation Biology, Ecology, Ecology Letters, Environmental and Ecological statistics, Functional Ecology, Global Change Biology, Human Wildlife Interactions, Journal of Animal Ecology, Journal of Applied Ecology, Journal of Ornithology, Marine Ecological Progress Series, Methods in Ecology and Evolution, Nature, Nature Climate Change, Oecologia, Oikos, Plos One, Proceedings of the Royal Society B series, Southeastern Naturalist, the Auk, the Western North American Naturalist, the Wilson Journal of Ornithology, the Herpetological Journal. OTHER ACTIVITIES/ACCOMPLISHMENTS Popular Press Coverage: 2018 CSU News. Traipsing for whiptails, and other tails of undergraduate research By Anne Manning. Published

Aug. 16, 2018. https://source.colostate.edu/move-in-2018-traipsing-for-whiptails-and-other-tales-of-undergraduate research/?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=t0816

2016 Black Bear research covered in:

The British Ecological Society: http://www.britishecologicalsociety.org/press-release-controversial-black-bear-hunt-disproportionately-harvests-nuisance-bears-reduces-human-bear-conflicts/ Phys Org: http://phys.org/news/2016-11-harvest-nuisance-black-jersey-human-bear.html Science Daily: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/11/161129153839.htm Utah Public Radio: http://upr.org/post/people-and-bears-hunting-coexistence Utah State University: http://www.usu.edu/today/index.cfm?id=56346&nl=501

2015 Coverage of research on the impacts of climate change on hibernators in the Western US in Utah State Today: http://www.usu.edu/today/index.cfm?id=55210&nl=444

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2015 Coverage of research on the impacts of climate change on hibernators in the Western US in High Country News, Lost Cabin Productions (Dakin Henderson) http://www.hcn.org/articles/wild-science-uinta-ground-squirrels-and-climate-change

2014 The Herald journal, USU study to focus on ground squirrels: http://m.news.hjnews.com/allaccess/article_52883512-a553-11e3-98aa-001a4bcf887a.html?mode=jqm

2013 Videnskab.dk Denmark's national research portal for the general public: http://videnskab.dk/miljo-naturvidenskab/se-billederne-gaes-smadrer-naturomrade (interview on lesser snow goose habitat

degradation on con sequences on their demography; in Danish)