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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. 
 
Reisinger, Alexander J., Peter M. Groffman, and Emma J. Rosi-Marshall. 2016. “Nitrogen-Cycling Process Rates across Urban Ecosystems”. FEMS Microbiology Ecology 92 (12): fiw198. doi:10.1093/femsec/fiw198.
Lee, Sylvia S., A. Paspalof, D. Snow, Erinn K. Richmond, Emma J. Rosi-Marshall, and John J. Kelly. 2016. “Occurrence and Potential Biological Effects of Amphetamine on Stream Communities”. Environmental Science & Technology 50 (17): 9727-35. doi:10.1021/acs.est.6b03717.
Rosi-Marshall, Emma J., K. A. Vallis, Colden V. Baxter, and J. M. Davis. 2016. “Retesting a Prediction of the River Continuum Concept: Autochthonous Versus Allochthonous Resources in the Diets of Invertebrates”. Freshwater Science 35 (2): 534-43. doi:10.1086/686302.
Hall, Robert O., Charles B. Yackulic, Theodore A. Kennedy, Michael D. Yard, Emma J. Rosi-Marshall, N. Voichick, and Kathrine E. Behn. 2015. “Turbidity, Light, Temperature, and Hydropeaking Control Primary Productivity in the Colorado River, Grand Canyon”. Limnology and Oceanography 60 (2): 512-26. doi:10.1002/lno.10031.
Reisinger, Alexander J., J.L. Tank, Emma J. Rosi-Marshall, Robert O. Hall, and M. A. Baker. 2015. “The Varying Role of Water Column Nutrient Uptake Along River Continua in Contrasting Landscapes”. Biogeochemistry 125 (1): 115-31. doi:10.1007/s10533-015-0118-z.
Rosi-Marshall, Emma J., and John J. Kelly. 2015. “Antibiotic Stewardship Should Consider Environmental Fate of Antibiotics”. Environmental Science & Technology 49 (9): 5257-58. doi:10.1021/acs.est.5b01519.
Wagner, Anne M., Diane L. Larson, Julie A. DalSoglio, James A. Harris, Paul Labus, Emma J. Rosi-Marshall, and Kristin E. Skrabis. 2015. “A Framework for Establishing Restoration Goals for Contaminated Ecosystems”. Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management 12 (2): 264-72. doi:10.1002/ieam.1709.
Walters, David M., Emma J. Rosi-Marshall, Theodore A. Kennedy, Wyatt F. Cross, and Colden V. Baxter. 2015. “Mercury and Selenium Accumulation in the Colorado River Food Web, Grand Canyon, USA”. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry, n/a - n/a. doi:10.1002/etc.3077.
Costello, David M., Emma J. Rosi-Marshall, Lawton E. Shaw, Michael Grace, and John J. Kelly. 2015. “A Novel Method to Assess Effects of Chemical Stressors on Natural Biofilm Structure and Function”. Freshwater Biology 61 (12): 2129-40. doi:10.1111/fwb.2016.61.issue-1210.1111/fwb.12641.
Rosi-Marshall, Emma J., D. Snow, S.L. Bartelt-Hunt, A. Paspalof, and J.L. Tank. 2015. “A Review of Ecological Effects and Environmental Fate of Illicit Drugs in Aquatic Ecosystems”. Journal of Hazardous Materials 282: 18-25. doi:10.1016/j.jhazmat.2014.06.062.