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B R I A N T. K L I N G B E I L Postdoctoral Research Associate Saltmarsh Habitat & Avian Research Program Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of Connecticut 75 North Eagleville Road, Storrs, CT, 06269-3043 [email protected] EDUCATION Ph.D. in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of Connecticut, Michael R Willig, Advisor Dissertation Title: Biodiversity Dynamics of Forest Birds in Fragmented Landscapes: A Multidimensional Approach for Ecology and Conservation. 2015 M.S. in Biological Sciences Texas Tech University, Michael R. Willig, Advisor Thesis title: Response of Bats to Landscape Structure in Amazonian Forest: An Analysis at Multiple Scales. 2007 B.S. in Biological Sciences University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee 2001 B.S. in Philosophy University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee 2001 PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE Postdoctoral Research Associate University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut June 2015-present Research: Avian Saltmarsh Conservation Planning: Developing region-wide conservation priorities for saltmarsh birds and their habitats across northeastern United States. Research incorporates data on species distributions, abundance and demography in combination with remote sensing and associated spatial data to prioritize locations for conservation. Results of prioritization are compared among alternative sea level rise scenarios to evaluate vulnerability of sites to climate change. Additional project details at: http://www.tidalmarshbirds.org/ Teaching: Current Topics in Conservation Biology (1cr. seminar-Co-Instructor) B.T. Klingbeil, CV 1 Graduate Research and Teaching Assistant University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut August 2006 -December 2014 Research: Avian Biodiversity and Landscape Ecology: Developed an acoustic monitoring program to investigate relationships between forest bird biodiversity and landscape structure. Research included avian point count surveys, habitat assessments, analysis of acoustic recordings with ARUs and use of spatial and statistical analyses. Population Dynamics of Tropical Gastropods: Coordinated travel and research logistics, recruited and trained field assistants, and led field data collection for biannual research expeditions to investigate community dynamics of tropical forest invertebrates in the El Yunque National Forest, Puerto Rico. Field research occurred for 2 weeks in the spring and 4-6 weeks in the summer. Teaching: Dimensions of Biodiversity Distributed Graduate Seminar (3 cr. seminar - TA) Introduction to Conservation Biology (3 cr. lecture - TA) Principles of Biology I (majors lab sections -TA) Foundations of Biology (non-majors lab sections - TA) Graduate Research and Teaching Assistant Texas Tech University, Lubbock TX August 2003 –August 2006 Research: Biodiversity and Landscape Ecology of Tropical Bats: Organized and led surveys of bat, rodent, and marsupial biodiversity in lowland amazon rainforest near Iquitos, Peru. Field research entailed 8 months of continuous data collection and included preparation of museum specimens of bats, rodents, and marsupials as well as collection of blood and tissue samples. Spatial analyses were used to evaluate the effects of tropical forest fragmentation on bat communities. Teaching: Ecology and Environmental Problems (non-majors lab sections - TA) Biology of Animals (non-majors lab sections - TA) Introduction to Biology I (majors lab sections - TA) RESEARCH GRANTS, AWARDS AND FELLOWSHIPS 2014 UCONN Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Summer Research Fellowship. $3,000 2013 UCONN Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Summer Research Fellowship. $1,000 2012 UCONN Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and CT Museum of Natural History, Ralph M. Wetzel Vertebrate Research Award. $525 B.T. Klingbeil, CV 2 2011 Audubon Connecticut (with M.R. Willig and S.J. Presley). $18,554 2011 National Science Foundation, University of Connecticut, Northeast Alliance for Graduate Education and the Professoriate Mentoring Fellowship. $3,000 2010 UCONN Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and CT Museum of Natural History, Ralph M. Wetzel Vertebrate Research Award. $900 2010 UCONN Center for Environmental Sciences and Engineering, Multidisciplinary Environmental Research Award. $7,000 2009 American Society of Mammalogists, Elizabeth Horner Award. $500 2009 American Society of Mammalogists, Grants-in-Aid of Research. $1,000 2006 The Graduate School, Texas Tech University, Summer Research Award $2,300 PUBLICATIONS Klingbeil, B.T. and M.R. Willig. 2016. Matrix composition and landscape heterogeneity structure multiple dimensions of temperate forest bird biodiversity. Biodiversity and Conservation Accepted. Klingbeil, B.T. and M.R. Willig. 2016. Community assembly in temperate forest birds: habitat filtering, interspecific interactions and priority effects. Evolutionary Ecology 30:703-722. Bloch, C.P. and B.T. Klingbeil. 2016. Anthropogenic factors and habitat complexity influence biodiversity but wave exposure drives species turnover of a subtropical rocky intertidal metacommunity. Marine Ecology 37: 67-76. Klingbeil, B.T. and M.R. Willig. 2015. Bird biodiversity assessments in temperate forest: the value of point count versus acoustic monitoring protocols. PeerJ 3:e973. Presley, S.J., T. Dallas, B.T. Klingbeil, and M.R. Willig. 2015. Phylogenetic signals in hostparasite associations for Neotropical bats and Nearctic desert rodents. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 116: 312-347. Dreiss, L.M., K.R. Burgio, L.M. Cisneros, B.T. Klingbeil, B.D. Patterson, S.J. Presley, & M.R. Willig. 2015. Taxonomic, functional, and phylogenetic dimensions of rodent biodiversity along an extensive tropical elevational gradient. Ecography 38:1-13. Pfeifer, M., V. Lefebvre, L. Baeten, C. Banks-Leite, J. Barlow, M.G. Betts, J. Brunet, A. Cerezo, L.M. Cisneros, S. Collard, N. D’Cruze, C. da Silva Motta, S. Duguay, H. Eggermont, F. Eigenbrod, T.A. Gardner, A.S. Hadley, T.R. Hanson, J.E. Hawes, T. Heartsill Scalley, B.T. Klingbeil, A. Kolb, U. Kormann, S. Kumar, T. Lachat, P. Lakeman Fraser, V. Lantschner, W.F. Laurance, L. Lens, C.J. Marsh, G.F. Medina-Rangel, S. Melles, D. Mezger, W.L. Overal, C. Owen, C.A. Peres, B. Phalan, A.M. Pidgeon, O. Pilia, H.P. Possingham, M.L. Possingham, D.C. Raheem, D.B Ribeiro, R. Robinson, W.D. Robinson, T. Rytwinski, C. Scherber, E.M. Slade, E. Somarriba, P.C. Stouffer, M.J. Struebig, J.M. Tylianakis, T. Tscharntke, A.J. Tyre, J.N. Urbina Cardona, H.L. Vasconcelos, K. Wells, M.R. Willig, E. Wood, R.P. Young, A.V. Bradley, and R.M. Ewers. 2014. BIOFRAG – A new database for analysing BIOdiversity responses to forest FRAGmentation. Ecology and Evolution 4:1524-1537. Cisneros, L.M., K.R. Burgio, L.M. Dreiss, B.T. Klingbeil, B.D. Patterson, S.J. Presley, and M.R. Willig. 2014. Multiple dimensions of bat biodiversity along an extensive tropical elevational gradient. Journal of Animal Ecology 83: 1124-1136. B.T. Klingbeil, CV 3 Willig, M.R., S.J. Presley, C.P. Bloch, I. Castro-Arellano, L.M. Cisneros, C.L. Higgins, and B.T. Klingbeil. 2011. Tropical metacommunities and elevational gradients: disentangling effects of forest type from other elevational factors. Oikos 120:1497-1508. Presley, S.J., M.R. Willig, C.P. Bloch, I. Castro-Arellano, C.L. Higgins, and B.T. Klingbeil. 2010. A complex metacommunity structure for gastropods along an elevational gradient: axes of specialization and environmental variation. Biotropica 43:480-488. Klingbeil, B.T. & M.R. Willig. 2010. Seasonal differences in population-, ensemble-, and community-level responses of bats to landscape structure in Amazonia. Oikos 119:1654-1664. Klingbeil, B.T. and M.R. Willig. 2009. Guild-specific responses of bats to landscape composition and configuration in fragmented Amazonian rainforest. Journal of Applied Ecology 46:203-13. MANUSCRIPTS (in review) Burgio, K.R., L.M. Cisneros, K.E. Davis, L.M. Dreiss, B.T. Klingbeil, B.D. Patterson, S.J. Presley, and M.R. Willig. Dimensions of passerine biodiversity along a tropical elevational gradient: a nexus for historical biogeography and contemporary ecology. Ecography. Presley, S.J., L.M. Cisneros, C.L. Higgins, B.T. Klingbeil, S.M. Scheiner, and M.R. Willig. Human-modified landscapes filter functional and phylogenetic biodiversity of bat communities. Biotropica. PROFESSIONAL PRESENTATIONS (* indicates undergraduate or ^ indicates graduate student mentored) Klingbeil,B.T., J.B. Cohen, M.D. Correll, C.R. Field, T.P. Hodgman, A.I. Kovach, B.J. Olsen, W.G. Shriver, W.A. Wiest, and C.S. Elphick. 2016. Trade-offs in Tidal Marsh Bird Conservation Planning for Northeastern North America. North American Congress for Conservation Biology, Madison, Wisconsin. Burgio, K.R., K.E. Davis, L.M. Dreiss, L.M. Cisneros, B.T. Klingbeil, S.J. Presley, and M.R. Willig. 2016. Integrating multiple dimensions of biodiversity and considerations of climate change for parrot conservation. North American Ornithological Conference, Washington, D.C. Klingbeil, B.T. 2016. Valuing the Trade-off Among Saltmarsh Obligates. Invited Presentation at the Atlantic Coast Joint Venture Game and Nongame Technical Committee Meeting, Virginia Beach, Virginia. Klingbeil, B.T. 2015. Saltmarsh Conservation Planning. Invited presentation at the Coordination of American Black Duck Habitat Modeling Efforts Workshop, Franklin, Connecticut. Serhiyenko, V., N. Ravishanker, M.R. Willig, and B.T. Klingbeil. 2015. Multivariate Temporal Dynamics of Gastropod Abundance in a Puerto Rican Tropical Forest. New England Statistics Symposium, Storrs, Connecticut. Hathaway, N., C.P. Bloch, K. Bouley, B.T. Klingbeil, S. Sawyer, and J. Silva. 2015. A Comparison of Biodiversity and Community Structure Between Temperate and B.T. Klingbeil, CV 4 Subtropical Rocky Shores. Northeast Natural History Conference, Springfield, Massachusetts. Morozova*, E., B.T. Klingbeil, and M.R. Willig. 2013. Relationships Between Two Northeastern Bats, Myotis lucifugus and Eptesicus fuscus, and Landscape Structure. Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Willig, M.R., K.R. Burgio, L.M. Cisneros, L.M. Dreiss, B.T. Klingbeil, B.D. Patterson, and S.J. Presley. 2013. Comparative Biodiversity of Bats and Rodents Along an Extensive Tropical Elevational Gradient: Taxonomic, Functional, and Phylogenetic Dimensions. Annual Meeting of the American Society of Mammalogists, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Klingbeil, B.T., K.R. Burgio, L.M. Cisneros, L.M. Dreiss, B.D. Patterson, S.J. Presley, and M.R. Willig. 2012. Variation in Multiple Dimensions of Biodiversity Along a Tropical Elevation Gradient: Inter-taxon Comparisons. Annual Meeting of the Ecological Society of America, Portland, Oregon. Abbott*, K.M., B.T. Klingbeil, and M.R. Willig. 2012. Statistical Modeling of Seasonal Differences in Habitat Selection of Three Species of Terrestrial Gastropods. University of Connecticut Frontiers in Undergraduate Research, Storrs, Connecticut. McComb^, J.M., B.T. Klingbeil, and M.R.Willig. 2011. A Comparison of Forest-Edge and Forest-Interior Bird Species Using Acoustic Monitoring. Northeast Alliance for Graduate Education and the Professoriate Summer Research Symposium, Storrs, Connecticut. Klingbeil, B.T. 2010. Seasonal Variation in Responses of Bats to Landscape Structure in Amazonia. University of Connecticut EEB Graduate Research Symposium, Storrs, Connecticut. Willig, M. R., C. P. Bloch, I. Castro-Arellano, L. M. Cisneros, B. T. Klingbeil, and S. J. Presley. 2009. Metacommunity Structure of Gastropods Along an Elevational Gradient in the Luquillo Mountains. LTER All Scientists Meeting Meeting, Estes Park, Colorado.. Klingbeil, B.T., C. P. Bloch, I. Castro-Arellano, L. M. Cisneros, S. J. Presley, and M. R. Willig. 2009. Metacommunity Structure of Gastropods Along an Elevational Gradient in the Luquillo Mountains, Puerto Rico. Luquillo LTER Annual Meeting, Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico. Klingbeil, B.T. and M.R. Willig. 2008. Multi-scale Responses of Phyllostomids to Landscape Structure. American Society of Mammalogists, Brookings, South Dakota. MENTORING 2012-2013 Ekaterina Morozova. Independent research project: Using autonomous recording units to evaluate relationships between Myotis lucifugus and Eptesicus fuscus, and landscape structure in Connecticut forests. 2012-2013 Christopher Roberts. Research assistant: Biodiversity dynamics of forest birds in fragmented landscapes: a multidimensional approach for ecology and conservation. 2011-2012 Katherine Abbott (co-advised with M. Willig). Independent research project: Statistical modeling of seasonal differences in habitat selection of three species of terrestrial gastropods. B.T. Klingbeil, CV 5 2012 2012 2011 2011 Scott Adamson. Research assistant: Biodiversity dynamics of forest birds in fragmented landscapes: a multidimensional approach for ecology and conservation. Ryan Hall. Research assistant: Biodiversity dynamics of forest birds in fragmented landscapes: a multidimensional approach for ecology and conservation. Jacqueline McComb, NSF NEAGEP Fellow (co-advised with M. Willig). Independent research project: A comparison of forest-edge and forestinterior bird species using acoustic monitoring. Jason Lech. Research assistant: Biodiversity dynamics of forest birds in fragmented landscapes: a multidimensional approach for ecology and conservation. PROFESSIONAL SERVICE Guest Editor of forthcoming special issue in Avian Conservation and Ecology entitled: “Advancing bird population monitoring with acoustic recording technologies” to be published in winter 2016-17. External Scientific Reviewer of research proposals for BiodivERsA (a network of 32 agencies and ministries from 19 European countries) on the theme: Understanding and managing biodiversity dynamics to improve ecosystem functioning and delivery of ecosystem services in a global change context. Reviewer: Basic and Applied Ecology, Biological Conservation, Ecography, Ecology and Evolution, Journal of Animal Ecology, Journal of Applied Ecology, Journal of Mammalogy, Landscape Ecology. B.T. Klingbeil, CV 6