Sarah Glaser, PhD
Received her degree February 2007

Dissertation Title: Foraging ecology of North Pacific albacore in the California Current System
Adjunct Professor of Biology, University of North Texas (2007)
Postdoctoral Fellow, Scripps Institution of Oceanography
Undergraduate Degree: B.S. Biology, B. S. Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences
Undergraduate University: Kansas State University
Email: sglaser@ucsd.edu
Website: http://sarahmglaser.wordpress.com/
Advisor: Dave Checkley
I study marine food web ecology and fisheries, and my dissertation investigates the role of albacore tuna as top predators in the North Pacific ocean.
My research experience is broad. As a trained field biologist, I have worked on plant nutrient dynamics in Alaska and Maine, studied coral reef ecology in Australia and the Caribbean, and focused on fish biology and fisheries in the California Current Ecosystem. I have spent considerable time on recreational fishing boats as an observer and collector. I am also a certified research scuba diver. My laboratory work includes genetic sequencing and marine taxonomy. I am well trained in statistics and computer modeling. I have a particular interest in complex systems and applying methodologies from this field to real ecological data. Along those lines, I want to better understand food web topology and the role of interaction strengths in large pelagic (open) food webs.
In addition to my work in biology, I have published manuscripts on detecting oceanographic regime shifts through nonlinear time series analysis (Nature) and the impacts of climate change on rainfall and civil conflict in Sub-Saharan Africa (Political Geography).
Research Interests
Sarah Glaser's research involves ocean food webs, particularly those
involving commercial fishes such as tuna. She can answer questions
about the effects of climate change on commercial fisheries and general
climate impacts on marine communities.
Publications
Cullen S. Hendrix and Sarah M. Glaser. (2007) “Trends and Triggers: Climate, Climate Change and Civil Conflict in Sub-Saharan Africa.” Political Geography. 26: 695-715.
Chih-hao Hsieh, Sarah M. Glaser, Andrew J. Lucas, George Sugihara. (2005) “Distinguishing random environmental fluctuations from ecological catastrophes for the North Pacific Ocean.” Nature 435: 336-340.
|