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Dr. Shannon L. LaDeau

Disease Ecologist | PhD, Duke University

Expertise
biodiversity, arbovirus, urban, mosquito

845 677-7600 x204

Shannon LaDeau works at the interface of ecology and disease. Her research explores how environmental conditions shape populations of disease-carrying animals such as mosquitoes and ticks, to reduce human exposure to Zika, West Nile virus, Chikungunya, Lyme disease, and other infections.

LaDeau’s work in urban ecology focuses on quantifying mosquito abundance and biting behavior, modeling transmission risk, and predicting vector populations’ response to environmental change - with an emphasis on how human behavior impacts mosquitoes. By unraveling how built and green spaces influence mosquito numbers block-by-block in Baltimore, she is advancing the science needed for effective mosquito control. This work strives to heal legacies of environmental injustice that have left poor and minoritized urban residents more vulnerable to mosquito-borne diseases.

Other projects include modeling techniques to reveal how climate change influences tick populations and Lyme disease risk throughout the US eastern seaboard, ecological forecasting methods that better predict ecosystem-wide response to climate change, and factors that influence transmission of a virus threatening salmon in the Columbia River Basin.

LaDeau is an Associate Editor-in-Chief for the Ecological Society of America’s journal Ecosphere.

Goodman, Heather, A. Egizi, Dina M. Fonseca, Paul Leisnham, and Shannon L. LaDeau. 2018. “Primary Blood-Hosts of Mosquitoes Are Influenced by Social and Ecological Conditions in a Complex Urban Landscape”. Parasites & Vectors 11. doi:10.1186/s13071-018-2779-7.
Stefopoulou, Angeliki, George Balatsos, Angeliki Petraki, Shannon L. LaDeau, Dimitrios Papachristos, and Antonios Michaelakis. 2018. “Reducing Aedes Albopictus Breeding Sites through Education: A Study in Urban Area”. PLOS ONE 13 (11): e0202451. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0202451.
Bodner, Danielle, Shannon L. LaDeau, and Paul Leisnham. 2018. “Relationships Among Immature-Stage Metrics and Adult Abundances of Mosquito Populations in Baltimore, MD”. Journal of Medical Entomology 56 (1): 192-98. doi:10.1093/jme/tjy185.
Biehler, Dawn, Joel Baker, John-Henry Pitas, Yinka Bode-George, Rebecca C. Jordan, Amanda Sorensen, S. Wilson, et al. 2018. “Beyond ‘the Mosquito People’: The Challenges of Engaging Community for Environmental Justice in Infested Urban Spaces”. In The Palgrave Handbook of Critical Physical Geography, 295-318. Springer International Publishing. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-71461-5_14.
Breyta, Rachel, Ilana Brito, Paige F. B. Ferguson, Gael Kurath, Kerry A. Naish, Maureen K. Purcell, Andrew R. Wargo, and Shannon L. LaDeau. 2017. “Transmission Routes Maintaining a Viral Pathogen of Steelhead Trout Within a Complex Multi-Host Assemblage”. Ecology and Evolution 7 (20): 8187-8200. doi:10.1002/ece3.3276.
Pickett, Steward T. A., Mary L. Cadenasso, Emma J. Rosi, Kenneth T Belt, Peter M. Groffman, Morgan Grove, E. Irwin, et al. 2017. “Dynamic Heterogeneity: A Framework to Promote Ecological Integration and Hypothesis Generation in Urban Systems”. Urban Ecosystems 20 (1): 1-14. doi:10.1007/s11252-016-0574-9.
Villena, Oswaldo, Ivana Terry, Kayoko Iwata, E.R. Landa, Shannon L. LaDeau, and Paul Leisnham. 2017. “Effects of Tire Leachate on the Invasive Mosquito <i>Aedes albopictus< i> and the Native Congener <i>Aedes triseriatus< I&gt”;. PeerJ 5: e3756. doi:10.7717/peerj.3756.
Breyta, Rachel, Ilana Brito, Gael Kurath, and Shannon L. LaDeau. 2017. “Infectious Hematopoietic Necrosis Virus Virological and Genetic Surveillance 2000-2012”. Ecology 98 (1): 283-83. doi:10.1002/ecy.1634.
LaDeau, Shannon L., Barbara A. Han, Emma J. Rosi, and Kathleen C. Weathers. 2017. “The Next Decade of Big Data in Ecosystem Science”. Ecosystems 20 (2767): 274-83. doi:https://doi.org/10.1007/s10021-016-0075-y.
Little, E., Dawn Biehler, Paul Leisnham, Rebecca C. Jordan, S. Wilson, and Shannon L. LaDeau. 2017. “Socio-Ecological Mechanisms Supporting High Densities of Aedes Albopictus (Diptera: Culicidae) in Baltimore, MD”. Journal of Medical Entomology 54 (5): 1183-92. doi:10.1093/jme/tjx103.