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Dr. Emma J. Rosi

Aquatic Ecologist | PhD, University of Georgia

Expertise
freshwater, invasive species, human impacts

845 677-7600 x232

Emma Rosi is advancing our understanding of how land use, urbanization, and climate change shape freshwater ecosystems, with projects exploring environmental contaminants such as pharmaceutical and personal care products, aging wastewater infrastructure, environmental implications of agricultural GMOs, and the effects of dams.

Rosi directs the Baltimore Ecosystem Study (BES), a National Science Foundation Long Term Ecological Research site. As part of BES, Rosi is exploring the role that failing wastewater infrastructure plays in polluting streams and creating antibiotic-resistant ‘superbugs’. She is also revealing how prescription and illicit drugs that enter our waterways impact freshwater quality and aquatic life.

In addition to her work on human-driven threats to freshwaters, Rosi co-leads a long-term project, in collaboration with Yale University, investigating how wildebeest and hippos shape the food web in the Kenyan reach of Africa’s Mara River.

Rosi is a leader in the field of freshwater science and has conducted research on the role of  emerging contaminants shaping these systems.  Rosi serves on the  US Environmental Protection Agency’s Science Advisory Board and her research has implications for our understanding of anthropogenic stressors on freshwater ecosystems. 
 
Cross, Wyatt F., Emma J. Rosi-Marshall, Kathrine E. Behn, Theodore A. Kennedy, Robert O. Hall, A.E. Fuller, and Colden V. Baxter. 2010. “Invasion and Production of New Zealand Mud Snails in the Colorado River, Glen Canyon”. Biol. Invasions 12: 3033-43. doi:10.1007/s10530-010-9694-y.
Warrner, T. J., Todd V. Royer, J.L. Tank, N.A. Griffiths, Emma J. Rosi-Marshall, and M.R. Whiles. 2009. “Dissolved Organic Carbon in Streams from Artificially Drained and Intensively Farmed Watersheds in Indiana, USA”. Biogeochemistry 95: 295-307.
Griffiths, N.A., J.L. Tank, Todd V. Royer, C.P. Chambers, M.A. Evans-White, T.C. Frauendorf, Emma J. Rosi-Marshall, and M.R. Whiles. 2009. “Microbial Respiration and Decomposition of Conventional and Genetically-Engineered Corn Detritus in Midwestern US Agricultural Streams”. Ecol. Appl. 19: 133-42.
Griffiths, N.A., J.L. Tank, Todd V. Royer, Emma J. Rosi-Marshall, M.R. Whiles, C.P. Chambers, T.C. Frauendorf, and M.A. Evans-White. 2009. “Rapid Decomposition of Maize Detritus in Agricultural Headwater Streams”. Ecological Applications 19 (1): 133-42. doi:10.1890/07-1876.1.
Entrekin, S.A., J.L. Tank, Emma J. Rosi-Marshall, T.J. Hoellein, and G.A. Lamberti. 2009. “Response of Secondary Production by Macroinvertebrates to Large Wood Addition in Three Michigan Streams”. Freshwater Biol. 54: 1741-58.
Hoellein, T.J., J.L. Tank, Emma J. Rosi-Marshall, and S.A. Entrekin. 2009. “Temporal Variation of Substratum-Specific Rates of N Uptake and Metabolism and Their Relative Contribution at the Stream-Reach Scale”. J. N. Am. Benthol. Soc. 28: 305-18.
Entrekin, S.A., J.L. Tank, Emma J. Rosi-Marshall, T.J. Hoellein, and G.A. Lamberti. 2008. “Responses in Organic Matter Accumulation and Processing to an Experimental Wood Addition in Three Headwater Streams”. Freshwater Biology 53 (8): 1642-57. doi:10.1111/fwb.2008.53.issue-810.1111/j.1365-2427.2008.01984.x.
Tank, J.L., Emma J. Rosi-Marshall, M. A. Baker, and Robert O. Hall. 2008. “Are Rivers Just Big Streams? A Pulse Method to Quantify Nitrogen Demand in a Large River”. Ecology 89 (10): 2935-45. doi:10.1890/07-1315.1.
Cordova, Jean M., Emma J. Rosi-Marshall, J.L. Tank, and G.A. Lamberti. 2008. “Coarse Particulate Organic Matter Transport in Low-Gradient Streams of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan”. Journal of the North American Benthological Society 27 (3): 760-71. doi:10.1899/06-119.1.
Schofield, K. A., C.M. Pringle, J.L. Meyer, and Emma J. Rosi-Marshall. 2008. “Functional Redundancy of Stream Macroconsumers Despite Differences in Catchment Land Use”. Freshwater Biology 53 (12): 2587-99. doi:10.1111/fwb.2008.53.issue-1210.1111/j.1365-2427.2008.02085.x.