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Dr. Joshua R. Ginsberg

President | PhD, Princeton University

Expertise
wildlife conservation

845 677-5343

Joshua Ginsberg’s career in ecology and conservation science spans 35 years and has global reach. During the 1980s and 1990s, he led research projects in Asia and Africa. In 1996, he began his tenure with the Wildlife Conservation Society, where he undertook a series of senior management roles and oversaw initiatives in North America, Asia, Africa, Latin America, and the marine environment.

Ginsberg has been an adjunct professor at Columbia University since 1998 and has mentored nine PhD and 24 Masters students. Since 2014, Dr. Ginsberg has also been a member of Rutgers University’s Ecology and Evolution Graduate Faculty. Past academic appointments include: Research Fellow in Ecology at the Zoological Society of London, Honorary Research Fellow and Lecturer at University College London, and Research Fellow at Oxford University.

Since joining Cary Institute in 2014, Ginsberg has galvanized strategic initiatives to grow the Institute’s research program and impact. He’s added dynamic new scientists and staff to the Cary team and launched infrastructure updates to support 21st-century science. Ginsberg is committed to helping Cary live its mission through campus greening initiatives. Building new partnerships with the broader scientific community and connecting our science to society are central to Cary Institute’s goals.

Ginsberg is on the boards of the Ocean Foundation, the Open Space Institute, TRAFFIC, the Salisbury Forum, the Foundation for Community Health, and served for 15 years as a founding board member of the Pure Earth/Blacksmith Institute. As an American Association for the Advancement of Science Diplomacy Fellow, he provided guidance on international conservation issues, including matters relating to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species and African biodiversity.

Rossi, N. A., A. Menchaca-Rodriguez, R. Antelo, B. Wilson, K. McLaren, F. Mazzotti, R. Crespo, et al. (2024) 2020. “High Levels of Population Genetic Differentiation in the American Crocodile (Crocodylus Acutus)”. Plos One 15 (7).
Wynn-Grant, R., Joshua R. Ginsberg, Carl W. Lackey, Eleanor J. Sterling, and Jon P. Beckmann. 2018. “Risky Business: Modeling Mortality Risk Near the Urban-Wildland Interface for a Large Carnivore”. Global Ecology and Conservation 16: e00443. doi:10.1016/j.gecco.2018.e00443.
Ginsberg, Joshua R. 2017. “Tracking Today”. Science 358 (6360): 177-77. doi:10.1126/science.aao5447.
Ginsberg, Joshua R. 2017. “When Protected Areas Prove Insufficient: Cheetah and ‘protection-reliant’ Species”. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 114 (3): 430-31. doi:10.1073/pnas.1619817114.
Lafferriere, Natalia A. Rossi, Rafael Antelo, Fernando Alda, Dick Mårtensson, Frank Hailer, Santiago Castroviejo-Fisher, José Ayarzagüena, et al. 2016. “Multiple Paternity in a Reintroduced Population of the Orinoco Crocodile (Crocodylus Intermedius) at the El Frío Biological Station, Venezuela”. PLOS ONE 11 (3): e0150245. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0150245.
Yackulic, Charles B., and Joshua R. Ginsberg. 2016. “The Scaling of Geographic Ranges: Implications for Species Distribution Models”. Landscape Ecology 31 (6): 1195-1208. doi:10.1007/s10980-015-0333-y.