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Dr. Stuart E.G. Findlay

Aquatic Ecologist | PhD, University of Georgia

Expertise
freshwater ecosystems, Hudson River

Stuart Findlay has worked on the Hudson River for over 30 years. His research on sensitive wetlands, shoreline restoration, and environmental monitoring is helping to guide the river’s recovery.

Human activities can have positive and negative consequences on the environment. It is important to reinforce the positive through effective management, while rapidly detecting and mitigating the negative. Findlay aims to identify impending problems and devise suitable solutions in streams, wetlands, and the Hudson River.

Aquatic vegetation provides essential nutrients and habitat for small animals, yet these plants are threatened by human-induced habitat alterations, including climate change. To improve the management, protection, and restoration of aquatic systems, it is essential to know how environmental conditions influence these communities and what humans can do to support them.

Findlay works closely with the Hudson River Environmental Conditions Observing System (HRECOS) and directed the installation of a monitoring station that continually records the river’s salinity, dissolved oxygen, pH, turbidity, and water elevation – a key management tool to facilitate a quick response to threats such as harmful contaminants or floods. He also studies the impacts of shoreline modification and guides sustainable management practices to protect native species and their habitats.

Findlay is committed to carrying science from discovery to dissemination and is actively engaged with a wide array of management, outreach, and educational programs. He has been an advisor to the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation for more than 25 years and works with several other private, state, and federal organizations.

Strayer, David L., Stuart E. G. Findlay, D.M. Miller, Heather M. Malcom, David T. Fischer, and Thomas Coote. 2012. “Biodiversity in Hudson River Shore Zones: Influence of Shoreline Type and Physical Structure”. Aquat. Sci. 74: 597-610. doi:10.1007/s00027-012-0252-9.
Hunsinger, G. B., S. Mitra, Stuart E. G. Findlay, and David T. Fischer. 2012. “Littoral-Zone Influences on Particulate Organic Matter Composition Along the Freshwater-Tidal Hudson River, New York”. Limnology and Oceanography 57 (5): 1303-16. doi:10.4319/lo.2012.57.5.1303.
Findlay, Stuart E. G. 2012. “Organic Matter Decomposition”. In K. C. Weathers, D. L. Strayer and G. E. Likens (eds.). Fundamentals of Ecosystem Science, 75-94. Academic Press, Inc.
Findlay, Stuart E. G., and David L. Strayer. 2012. “A Primer on Biologically Mediated Redox Reactions in Ecosystems”. In K. C. Weathers, D. L. Strayer and G. E. Likens (eds.). Fundamentals of Ecosystem Science, 297-301. Academic Press, Inc.
Findlay, Stuart E. G. 2011. “Linkages Between People and Ecosystems: How Did We Get from Separate to Equal?”. In An Environmental History of the Hudson River, R. Henshaw, Ed.. SUNY Press.
Findlay, Stuart E. G., P.J. Mulholland, Stephen K. Hamilton, J.L. Tank, M. J. Bernot, Amy J. Burgin, C.L. Crenshaw, et al. 2011. “Cross-Stream Comparison of Substrate-Specific Denitrification Potential”. Biogeochemistry 104 (1-3): 381-92. doi:10.1007/s10533-010-9512-8.
Courtwright, J., and Stuart E. G. Findlay. 2011. “Effects of Microtopography on Hydrology, Physicochemistry, and Vegetation in a Tidal Swamp of the Hudson River”. Wetlands 31: 239-49.
Jin, L., P. Whitehead, D.I. Siegel, and Stuart E. G. Findlay. 2011. “Salting Our Landscape: An Integrated Catchment Model Using Readily Accessible Data to Assess Emerging Road Salt Contamination to Streams”. Environ. Pollut. 159: 1257-65.
Findlay, Stuart E. G., and Victoria R. Kelly. 2011. “Emerging Indirect and Long-Term Road Salt Effects on Ecosystems”. In Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences – The Year in Ecology and Conservation Biology, 1223:58-68.
Findlay, Stuart E. G. 2010. “Stream Microbial Ecology”. J. N. Am. Benthol. Soc. 29: 170-81.