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Dr. Kathleen C. Weathers

Ecosystem Scientist | PhD, Rutgers University

Expertise
air-land-water interactions, heterogeneous landscapes, ecological importance of fog, air pollution, team science: training and research

845 677-7600 x137

Kathleen Weathers studies ecosystem processes within and among aquatic, airborne, and terrestrial systems.

She was co-Chair of the Global Lake Ecological Observatory Network (GLEON) for 10 years, guiding GLEON from its infancy to adulthood. GLEON is a world-wide grassroots collaboration of 800 research partners studying 150 lakes in 53 countries. Their aim: understand, predict, and communicate lakes’ response to environmental change using data from lake-based sensors. This work encompasses impacts from human activities such as road salting, agriculture, and climate change.

Weathers and her colleagues have created a new model for collaborative research that explicitly empowers early career scientists.

Weathers is an expert on fog, which carries nutrients, pollutants, and sometimes disease-causing pathogens. She studies links between ocean, air, and fog-dominated forests and recently, how fog may affect transfer of pathogens from water to land.

Ponette-Gonzalez, Weathers, students, and colleagues are studying the effects of mineral dust and black carbon – both of which impact ecosystems and human health. Mineral dust can deliver toxic pollutants to ecosystems and is a growing concern as climate change exacerbates drought.

Black carbon, created by burning fossil fuels, is known to cause lung and heart disease; this collaborative team is studying the role of vegetation in managing black carbon in urban areas.

Rüegg, Janine, Corinna Gries, Ben Bond-Lamberty, Gabriel J. Bowen, Benjamin S. Felzer, Nancy E. McIntyre, Patricia A Soranno, Kristin L. Vanderbilt, and Kathleen C. Weathers. 2014. “Completing the Data Life Cycle: Using Information Management in Macrosystems Ecology Research”. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 12 (1): 24-30. doi:10.1890/120375.
Cheruvelil, Kendra S., Patricia A Soranno, Kathleen C. Weathers, Paul C. Hanson, Simon J Goring, Christopher T. Filstrup, and Emily K. Read. 2014. “Creating and Maintaining High-Performing Collaborative Research Teams: The Importance of Diversity and Interpersonal Skills”. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 12 (1): 31-38. doi:10.1890/130001.
Carey, Cayelan C., Kathryn L. Cottingham, Kathleen C. Weathers, Jennifer A. Brentrup, N. M. Ruppertsberger, Holly A. Ewing, and Nelson G. Hairston. 2014. “Experimental Blooms of the Cyanobacterium Gloeotrichia Echinulata Increase Phytoplankton Biomass, Richness and Diversity in an Oligotrophic Lake”. Journal of Plankton Research 36 (2): 364-77. doi:10.1093/plankt/fbt105.
Weathers, Kathleen C. 2014. “Coastal Fog As a System: Developing an Interdisciplinary Research Agenda”. http://www.caryinstitute.org/sites/default/files/public/reprints/weathers_etal_pescadero_coastal_fog_workshop_summary.pdf.
Ponette-González, Alexandra, E. Marin-Spiotta, K. A. Brauman, K. A. Farley, Kathleen C. Weathers, and K. R. Young. 2014. “Hydrologic Connectivity in the High-Elevation Tropics: Heterogeneous Responses to Land Change”. BioScience 64 (2): 92-104. doi:10.1093/biosci/bit013.
Weathers, Kathleen C., J. Collett, C. Jordan, R. Gerraud, P. Matrai, M. O’Rourke, A. Torregrosa, and L. Borre. 2014. “Fog Research Frontiers: An Interdisciplinary Research Agenda for Coastal Fog Systems”. http://caryinstitute.org/reprints/weathers_coastal_fog_as_a_system_white_paper_2014.pdf.
Goring, Simon J, Kathleen C. Weathers, Walter K. Dodds, Patricia A Soranno, Lynn C. Sweet, Kendra S. Cheruvelil, John S Kominoski, Janine Rüegg, Alexandra M Thorn, and Ryan M. Utz. 2014. “Improving the Culture of Interdisciplinary Collaboration in Ecology by Expanding Measures of Success”. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 12 (1): 39-47. doi:10.1890/120370.
Rodríguez, Alexandra, Gary M. Lovett, Kathleen C. Weathers, Mary A. Arthur, Pamela H. Templer, Christine L. Goodale, and Lynn M. Christenson. 2014. “Lability of C in Temperate Forest Soils: Assessing the Role of Nitrogen Addition and Tree Species Composition”. Soil Biology and Biochemistry 77: 129-40. doi:10.1016/j.soilbio.2014.06.025.
Lovett, Gary M., Mary A. Arthur, Kathleen C. Weathers, Ross D. Fitzhugh, and Pamela H. Templer. 2013. “Nitrogen Addition Increases Carbon Storage in Soils, But Not in Trees, in an Eastern U.S. Deciduous Forest”. Ecosystems. doi:10.1007/s10021-013-9662-3.
Simkin, Samuel M., Barbara L. Bedford, and Kathleen C. Weathers. 2013. “Phytotoxic Sulfide More Important Than Nutrients for Plants Within a Groundwater-Fed Wetland”. Ecosystems 16 (6): 1118-29. doi:10.1007/s10021-013-9671-2.