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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.

Clark, James S., Michael S. Wolosin, Michael C. Dietze, Inés Ibanez, Shannon L. LaDeau, Miranda Welsh, and B. Kloeppel. 2007. “Tree Growth Inference and Prediction from Diameter Censuses and Ring Widths”. Ecological Applications 17 (7): 1942-53. doi:10.1890/06-1039.1.
LaDeau, Shannon L., A.M. Kilpatrick, and P.P. Marra. 2007. “West Nile Virus Emergence and Large-Scale Declines of North American Bird Populations”. Nature 447 (7145): 710-13. doi:10.1038/nature05829.
Kilpatrick, A.M., Shannon L. LaDeau, and P.P. Marra. 2007. “Ecology of the West Nile Virus Transmission and Its Impact on Birds in the Western Hemisphere”. The Auk 124 (4): 1121. doi:10.1642/0004-8038(2007)124[1121:EOWNVT]2.0.CO;2.
LaDeau, Shannon L., and James S. Clark. 2006. “Elevated CO2 and Tree Fecundity: The Role of Tree Size, Interannual Variability, and Population Heterogeneity”. Global Change Biology 12 (5): 822-33. doi:10.1111/gcb.2006.12.issue-510.1111/j.1365-2486.2006.01137.x.
Williams, Claire G., Shannon L. LaDeau, R. Oren, and Gabriel G. Katul. 2006. “Modeling Seed Dispersal Distances: Implications For Transgenic Pinus Taeda”. Ecological Applications 16 (1): 117-24. doi:10.1890/04-1901.
LaDeau, Shannon L., and James S. Clark. 2006. “Pollen Production by Pinus Taeda Growing in Elevated Atmospheric CO2”. Functional Ecology 20 (3): 541-47. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2435.2006.01133.x.
Ibanez, Inés, James S. Clark, Michael C. Dietze, Ken Feeley, Michelle H. Hersh, Shannon L. LaDeau, Allen McBride, Nathan E. Welch, and Michael S. Wolosin. 2006. “Predicting Biodiversity Change: Outside the Climate Envelope, Beyond the Species-Area Curve”. Ecology 87 (8): 1896-1906. doi:10.1890/0012-9658(2006)87[1896:PBCOTC]2.0.CO;2.
Clark, James S., and Shannon L. LaDeau. 2006. “Synthesizing Ecological Experiments and Observational Data With Hierarchical Bayes”. In Hierarchical Modeling for the Environmental Sciences, 41-58. Oxford University Press.
Clark, James S., Shannon L. LaDeau, and Inés Ibanez. 2004. “Fecundity of Trees and the Colonization-Competition Hypothesis”. Ecological Monographs 74 (3): 415-42. doi:10.1890/02-4093.
LaDeau, Shannon L. 2001. “Rising CO2 Levels and the Fecundity of Forest Trees”. Science 292 (5514): 95-98. doi:10.1126/science.1057547.