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GORDON WILLIAM HOLTGRIEVE, PH.D.
CURRICULUM VITAE
University of Washington
School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences
Box 355020, Seattle, WA 98195-5020
206.616.7041
[email protected]
http://faculty.washington.edu/gholt/
EDUCATION
Ph.D. University of Washington, Zoology, 2009
Dissertation title: Linking Species to Ecosystems: Effects of Spawning Salmon on Aquatic
Ecosystem Function in Bristol Bay, Alaska. Major advisor: Dr. Daniel Schindler
M.S.
Stanford University, Earth Systems Program, 2001
Thesis title: Distribution and Abundance of Native and Non-Native Fishes in San Francisquito
Creek, California. Major advisor: Dr. Carol Boggs
B.S.
Stanford University, Earth Systems Program, 1999
POSITIONS HELD
Assistant Professor
University of Washington, School of Aquatic & Fishery Sciences, Sept. 2013 - present
Post-doctoral Research Associate
University of Washington, School of Aquatic & Fishery Sciences, 2010–2013
Adjunct Teaching Faculty
University of Washington, School of Aquatic & Fishery Sciences, Autumn 2011
Las Positas Community College, Spring 2002
Graduate Assistant
University of Washington, Department of Biology, 2003–2009
Research Scientist
Hawai’i Ecosystems Projects, Stanford University, 2000–2003
Center for Conservation Biology, Stanford University, 1998–2000
Chinook Salmon Captive Broodstock Program, California Academy of Sciences, 1996–1998
HONORS AND AWARDS
Awards
·∙ G.E. Likens Award for an outstanding paper by an early career scientist. Ecological Society of
America Biogeosciences Section, 2012
·∙ Best Student Presentation (2nd place), American Fisheries Society, WA-BC chapter general
meeting, 2009
·∙ NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program, Honorable Mention, 2004
·∙ Stanford University Centennial Teaching Assistant Award, 2000
·∙ Stanford University Biological Sciences Excellence in Teaching Award, 1999
·∙ Stanford University Earth Systems Program Academic Excellence Award, 1999
Fellowships & Scholarships
·∙ University of Washington School of Aquatic & Fishery Sciences, H. Mason Keeler Fellowship,
2008–2009 ($11K)
·∙ Environmental Protection Agency STAR Fellowship, 2004–2007 ($107K)
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Achievement Rewards for College Scientists Award, 2003–2006 ($15K)
University of Washington Graduate School Top Scholar Award, 2003 ($4.6K)
GRANTS AND FUNDING
Research (* = active grant, † = pending)
*Systematic Fisheries Monitoring and Integrated Science for the Lower Mekong Basin, Phase II.
($715K) Margaret A. Cargill Foundation. 2015-2018. PI: G. Holtgrieve
*Sources and Sinks of Nitrate in Puget Sound Rivers. ($40K) University of Washington Royalty
Research Fund. 2013-2014. PI: G. Holtgrieve.
*Enabling Systematic Fisheries Monitoring and Integrated Science for the Lower Mekong Basin.
($220K) Margaret A. Cargill Foundation. 2014. PI: G. Holtgrieve
*Food Webs of the Tonle Sap Lake: Establishing Ecological Resource Flows that Support
Biodiversity, Fisheries, and People. ($350K) John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.
2012-2015. PI: G. Holtgrieve; co-PIs J. Richey, J. Sabo, D. Schindler.
†FEW: River FEWs: Workshop to Explore the Nexus Between Food, Energy and Water in a Large
International River System. ($98K) National Science Foundation. (2015) PI: G. Holtgrieve; coPI: J. Felkner.
†Preliminary Proposal: Hydrologic and Food Web Controls on Mercury Fluxes in a Tropical
Flood-Pulse Ecosystem. National Science Foundation. (2015) PI: G. Holtgrieve; co-PI: T.
Essington.
†Preliminary Proposal: How do Nitrogen Subsidies Influence Linkages Between Ecosystems?
National Science Foundation. (2015) PI: R. Kelly; co-PI: G. Holtgrieve.
†Preliminary Proposal: The Ecological Effects of Nitrogen Subsidies on Puget Sound Ecosystems.
($219K) WA SeaGrant. (2015) PI: R. Kelly; co-PI: G. Holtgrieve. Invited for full proposal.
S-STEM: Science that Matters. ($638K - declined) National Science Foundation. (2014) PI: D.
Gorman-Lewis; co-PIs: J. Parrish, G. Holtgrieve.
MRI: Acquisition of compound-specific isotope ratio mass spectrometry capabilities in support of
environmental science research. ($515K - declined) National Science Foundation. (2014) PI: G.
Holtgrieve; co-PIs: B. Alexander, M. Brett, J. Sachs, E. Steig.
WSC-Category 2- Collaborative: Linking Current and Future Hydrologic Change to Fisheries,
Nutrition, and Livelihoods in the Lower Mekong River Basin. ($2M - declined) National Science
Foundation (2013). PI: G. Holtgrieve; co-PIs: A. Drewnowski, B. Njissen, J. Richey.
Deciphering the Energetic Base for the World’s Largest Freshwater Fishery. ($14K - completed)
National Geographic Society/Waitt Foundation. 2010-2012. PI: G. Holtgrieve.
Small Awards
·∙ American Society of Limnology and Oceanography Early Career Travel Award, 2010 ($500)
·∙ Alexander Goetz instrument support program, Analytical Spectral Devices Inc., 2008 ($500)
·∙ Equipment grant, Bogen Imaging, Inc., 2008 ($300)
·∙ Travel grant, School of Aquatic & Fishery Sciences, University of Washington, 2007 ($300)
·∙ Travel grant, Department of Biology, University of Washington, 2006 ($600)
RESEARCH INTERESTS
1) Understanding how ecological diversity leads to productivity and stability in dynamic human-natural
resource systems, using global inland fishery systems as a model. 2) Sources and transfer of carbon
through aquatic food webs. 3) How animals interact with their physical environment and each other to
control aquatic ecosystem functions such as primary productivity and nutrient cycling. 4) Stable isotope
G.W. Holtgrieve
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techniques to elucidate biogeochemical processes at local to global scales. 5) Applying hierarchical and
Bayesian statistical modeling techniques to biogeochemical data.
PUBLICATIONS
Peer-reviewed (n=21)
McCann, KS, G Gellner, BC McMeans, GW Holtgrieve, N Rooney, L Hannah, M Cooperman, N.
So, and C Ward. (In press) Food webs and the sustainability of indiscriminate fisheries. Canadian
Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences.
Galloway, AWE, ME Eisenlord, MN Dethier, GW Holtgrieve, MT Brett. (2014) Quantitative
estimates of resource utilization by an herbivorous isopod using a Bayesian fatty acid mixing
model. Marine Ecology Progress Series. 507: 219-232.
Sadro, S, GW Holtgrieve, CT Solomon, and G Koch. (2014) Intra-diel patterns in ecosystem
respiration revealed using continuous oxygen data from lakes around the globe. Limnology &
Oceanography 59(5): 1666-1678.
Arias, ME, TA Cochrane, M Kummu, J Koponon, H Lauri, GW Holtgrieve, and T Piman. (2014)
Impacts of hydropower and climate change on drivers of ecological productivity of Southeast
Asia’s most important wetland. Ecological Modeling 272: 252-263, DOI:
0.1016/j.ecolmodel.2013.10.015.
Schmitz, OJ, PR Raymond, JA Estes, WA Kurz, GW Holtgrieve, ME Ritchie, DE Schindler, AC
Spivak, RW Wilson, MA Bradford, V Christensen, L Deegan, V Smetacek, MJ Vanni, and CC
Wilmers. (2013) Animating the carbon cycle. Ecosystems. DOI: 10.1007/s10021-013-9715-7.
Holtgrieve, GW, ME Arias, KN Irvine, D Lamberts, EJ Ward, M Kummu, J Koponen, J Sarkkula,
and JE Richey. (2013) Ecosystem metabolism and support of freshwater capture fisheries in the
Tonle Sap Lake, Cambodia. PLoS ONE, 8(8): e71395. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0071395.
Rogers, LA, DE Schindler, PJ Lisi, GW Holtgrieve, PR Leavitt, L Bunting, BP Finney, DT Selbie, G
Chen, I Gregory-Eaves, MJ Lisac, PB Walsh. (2013) Centennial-scale fluctuations and regional
complexity characterize Pacific salmon population dynamics over the last five centuries.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 110(5): 1750-1755.
Cooperman, MS, N So, M Arias, T Cochrane, V Elliott, T Hand, L Hannah, GW Holtgrieve, L
Kaufman, A Koening, J Koponen, V Kum, KS McCann, PB McIntyre, B Min C Ou, N Rooney, K
Rose, JL Sabo, KO Winemiller. (2012) A watershed moment for the Mekong: New regulations
may boost sustainability of the world’s largest inland fishery. Cambodian Journal of Natural
History, 2012, 100-106.
Jankowski, K, DE Schindler, and GW Holtgrieve. (2012) Assessing non-point source nitrogen
loading and nitrogen fixation in lakes using δ15N and nutrient stoichiometry. Limnology &
Oceanography. 57(3): 671-683 [doi: 10.4319/lo.2012.57.3.06710].
Holtgrieve, GW, DE Schindler, WO Hobbs, PR Leavitt, EJ Ward, L Bunting, G Chen, BP Finney, I
Gregory-Eaves, S Holmgren, MJ Lisac, PJ Lisi, K Nydick, LA Rogers, JE Saros, DT Selbie, MD
Shapley, PB Walsh, AP Wolfe (2011) A coherent signature of anthropogenic nitrogen deposition
to remote watersheds of the Northern Hemisphere. Science 334: 1545–1548. This paper was the
subject of a co-published Perspectives article by J. J. Elser, rated “Must Read” on Faculty of
1000 Ecology, and carried by over 20 news outlets including the Vancouver Sun, the Atlantic
Wire, Scientific American, and the BBC World (radio interview).
Irvine, KN, JE Richey, GW Holtgrieve, J Sarkkula, and M Sampson. (2011) Spatial and temporal
variability of turbidity, dissolved oxygen, conductivity, temperature, and fluorescence in the lower
Mekong River-Tonle Sap system identified using continuous monitoring. International Journal of
River Basin Management 9(2): 151–168.
G.W. Holtgrieve
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Ruff, CP, DE Schindler, J Armstrong, K Bentley, G Brooks, GW Holtgrieve, M McGlauflin, J Seeb,
and C Torgersen. (2011) Temperature-associated population diversity in salmon confers benefits
to mobile consumers. Ecology 92(11): 2073–2084.
Francis, TB, DE Schindler, GW Holtgrieve, E Larson, MD Scheuerell, BX Semmens, and EJ Ward.
(2011) Habitat heterogeneity and energetic support for zooplankton in temperate lakes. Ecology
Letters 14: 364-372.
Holtgrieve, GW and DE Schindler. (2011) Marine-derived nutrients, bioturbation, and ecosystem
metabolism: reconsidering the role of salmon in streams. Ecology 92 (2) 373-385.
Alin, SR, MFFL Rasera, CI Salimon, JE Richey, GW Holtgrieve, AV Krusche, and A Snidvongs.
(2011) Physical controls on carbon dioxide transfer velocity and flux in low-gradient river systems
and implications for regional carbon budgets. Journal of Geophysical Research, 116, G01009,
doi:10.1029/2010JG001398.
Holtgrieve, GW, DE Schindler, C Gowell, CP Ruff, and PJ Lisi. (2010) Stream geomorphology
regulates the effects of ecosystem engineering and nutrient enrichment by Pacific salmon on
periphyton. Freshwater Biology 55 (12): 2598–2611.
Holtgrieve, GW, DE Schindler, TA Branch, and ZT A’Mar. (2010) Simultaneous quantification of
aquatic ecosystem metabolism and re-aeration using a Bayesian statistical model of oxygen
dynamics. Limnology and Oceanography 55 (3): 1047–1063. Rated “Recommended” on
Faculty of 1000 Ecology.
Baker, MR, DE Schindler, GW Holtgrieve, and VL St. Louis. (2009) Bioaccumulation and transport
of contaminants: migrating sockeye salmon as vectors of mercury. Environmental Science &
Technology 43 (23): 8840–8846.
Holtgrieve, GW, DE Schindler, and PK Jewett. (2009) Large predators and biogeochemical hotspots:
Brown bear (Ursus arctos) predation on salmon alters nitrogen cycling in riparian soils.
Ecological Research 24 (5): 1125–1135.
Moore, JW, DE Schindler, JL Carter, J Fox, J Griffiths, and GW Holtgrieve. (2007) Biotic control of
stream fluxes: spawning salmon drive nutrient and matter export. Ecology 88 (5): 1278–1291.
Rated “Exceptional” on Faculty of 1000 Ecology.
Holtgrieve, GW, PK Jewett, and PA Matson. (2006) Variations in soil N cycling and trace gas
emissions in wet tropical forests. Oecologia 146: 584–594.
Holtgrieve, GW (2006) Species account: Sudden oak death. In Boersma, PD, SH Reichard, and A
van Buren (editors), Invasive Species in the Pacific Northwest. Univ. of Washington Press, Seattle,
WA.
Editor reviewed
Kavanaugh, MT, GW Holtgrieve, H Baulch, JR Brum, ML Cuvelier, CT Filstrup, KJ Nickols, GE
Small. A salty divide within ASLO? ASLO Bulletin 22(2): 34-37.
Carey, CC, PC Hanson, DA Bruesewitz, GW Holtgrieve, EL Kara, KC Rose, RL Smyth, KC
Weathers. (2012) Organized Oral Session 43. Novel Applications of High-Frequency Sensor Data
in Aquatic Ecosystems: Discoveries from GLEON, the Global Lake Ecological Observatory
Network. Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America. 93:100–105 [doi: 10.1890/0012-962393.1.100].
In review
Galloway, AWE, MT Brett, GW Holtgrieve, EJ Ward, AP Ballantyne, CW Burns, MJ Kainz, DC
Müller-Navarra, J Persson, JL Ravet, U Strandberg, SJ Taipale, and G Alhgren. A fatty acid
based Bayesian algorithm for inferring diet in aquatic consumers. PLoS ONE
In preparation
Holtgrieve, GW. Securing the Future of Freshwater Fisheries for Developing Countries.
G.W. Holtgrieve
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Schindler, DE, GW Holtgrieve, PR Leavitt, L Bunting, G Chen, BP Finney, I Gregory-Eaves , MJ
Lisac, PJ Lisi, LA Rogers, DT Selbie, MD Shapley, and PB Walsh. The marine-derived nutrient
shadow and ecosystem productivity in coastal western North America.
Other publications
Holtgrieve, GW and AE Launer. (2000) Fishes and Amphibians of the San Francisquito Creek and
Matadero Creek Watersheds, Stanford University: Report on 1998 & 1999 Field Activities. Center
for Conservation Biology, Stanford, CA, 2000.
Holtgrieve, GW (2000) Fishes of San Francisquito Creek. Jasper Ridge Biological Preserve Docent
Manual, Stanford, CA.
Holtgrieve, DG and GW Holtgrieve. (1995) Physical Stream Survey of Butte Creek, Butte County,
CA. Technical report for the Nature Conservancy and California State University, Chico, CA.
SCIENTIFIC PRESENTATIONS
2015
Holtgrieve, GW & EH Allison. Nutrition security of developing regions is vulnerable to
decline in freshwater fisheries. Global Conference on Inland Fisheries
2014
Schindler, DE, GW Holtgrieve*, LA Rogers, PJ Lisi, KT Bentley, P Walsh, M Lisac, I
Gregory-Eaves, D. Selbie, G. Chen, BP. Finney, L. Bunting and P.R. Leavitt. Inferring
salmon population dynamics and fishing impacts at multiple scales using sediment nitrogen
isotopes. Ecological Society of America annual meeting. *Invited presenter.
2013
Holtgrieve, GW. Floods, fish, and people: Current and future challenges for water resources
in the Mekong River Basin. Frontiers in Freshwater Science Seminar Series.
Holtgrieve, GW. Floods, fish, and people: Connecting biogeochemical fluxes to aquatic
ecosystem functions and people (Invited). American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting
2012
Holtgrieve, GW, DE Schindler, P Walsh. Nitrogen from humans pollutes remote lakes for
more than a century. US Fish & Wildlife Service Conservation Science Webinar Series.
Holtgrieve, GW, MT Brett, S Taipale, N So, and P Chheng. The importance of biogenic
methane for fisheries productivity in Tonle Sap Lake, Cambodia. Ecological Society of
America annual meeting.
2011
Holtgrieve, GW Linking species to ecosystems: Effects of spawning salmon on aquatic
ecosystem function. American Fisheries Society annual meeting.
Holtgrieve, GW, G Koch, S Sadro, and C Solomon. Intra-diel patterns in ecosystem
respiration revealed using continuous oxygen data from lakes around the globe. Ecological
Society of America annual meeting.
2010
Holtgrieve, GW Linking species to ecosystems: Effects of spawning salmon on aquatic
ecosystem function. University of Washington Water Center, Annual Review of Research.
Holtgrieve, GW, DE Schindler, TA Branch, and ZT A’mar. Simultaneous quantification of
aquatic ecosystem metabolism and reaeration using a Bayesian statistical model of oxygen
dynamics. American Society for Limnology and Oceanography aquatic sciences meeting.
2009
Holtgrieve, GW Salmon cioppino: how Pacific salmon impact critical ecosystem processes.
University of Oregon Department of Geography seminar. October 29.
Holtgrieve, GW, DE Schindler, and PD Quay. Marine-derived nutrients and ecosystem
metabolism: reconsidering the role of salmon in streams. American Fisheries Society, WABC chapter annual meeting. Award for best student presentation (2nd place).
Holtgrieve, GW Quantifying aquatic ecosystem metabolism using a Bayesian statistical
model of diel O2 and δ18O-O2 curves. University of Washington Chemical Oceanography
seminar (January 16).
G.W. Holtgrieve
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2008
Holtgrieve, GW, DE Schindler, DT Selbie, PR Leavitt, BP Finney, and I Gregory-Eaves.
Latitudinal variation in nitrogen loading to coastal North Pacific lakes as inferred from
nitrogen stable isotopes. Ecological Society of America annual meeting.
2007
Holtgrieve, GW, DE Schindler, and PK Jewett. When bears sit in the woods: Brown bear
(Ursus arctos) feeding on salmon alters N cycling in riparian soils. Ecological Society of
America annual meeting.
Holtgrieve, GW, DE Schindler, and SR Alin. Keystone species and ecosystem metabolism:
reconsidering the role of salmon in streams. American Society for Limnology and
Oceanography aquatic sciences meeting.
2002-06
Holtgrieve, GW and DE Schindler. Marine-derived nutrients and ecosystem metabolism:
reconsidering the role of salmon in streams (poster). EPA STAR Fellows Conference.
Holtgrieve, GW, DE Schindler, and SR Alin. Marine-derived nutrients and ecosystem
metabolism: reconsidering what salmon do to streams. North American Benthological Society
annual meeting.
Holtgrieve, GW and DE Schindler. Marine-derived nutrients and ecosystem metabolism:
reconsidering the role of salmon in streams. University of Washington Biology Department
Graduate Student Symposium.
Holtgrieve, GW and DE Schindler. Marine-derived nutrients and ecosystem metabolism:
reconsidering the role of salmon in streams. University of Washington School of Aquatic &
Fishery Sciences Graduate Student Symposium.
Holtgrieve, GW, SR Loarie, and AE Launer. (2003) Influence of invasive species and
cumulative watershed effects on threatened California red-legged frog (Rana aurora
draytonii) distribution in a suburban stream. Society for Conservation Biology annual
meeting.
Holtgrieve, GW, SR Loarie, and AE Launer. (2003) Influence of invasive species and
cumulative watershed effects on threatened California red-legged frog (Rana aurora
draytonii) distribution in a suburban stream. Bay Area Conservation Biology Society
Symposium.
Holtgrieve, GW, AE Launer and SR Loarie. (2002) Conservation Planning in a Suburban
Landscape: Lessons from the Silicon Valley. Ecological Society of America annual meeting.
TEACHING
Courses Taught
·∙ Scientific Writing and Communication (FISH 290, University of Washington), Winter 2015, 18
students, adjusted median rating 4.1 (0=lowest, 5=highest).
·∙ Advanced R Programming For Natural Scientists (FISH 553A), Autumn 2014, 37 students,
adjusted median rating 4.9.
·∙ Introduction to R Programming for Natural Scientists (FISH 552A), Autumn 2014, 40 students,
adjusted median rating 4.5.
·∙ Theory and Application of Stable Isotopes in Ecology (FISH 511A), Spring 2014, 40 students,
adjusted median rating 4.5.
·∙ Water and Society (FISH 101), Winter 2014 (co-taught with D. Schindler), 79 students, adjusted
median rating 4.3.
·∙ Conservation and Management of Aquatic Resources (FISH 323), Autumn 2011, 32 students,
adjusted median rating 4.1.
·∙ Biology for Non-Majors (Bio 10, Las Positas College), Spring 2002.
G.W. Holtgrieve
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Teaching Lectures
·∙ Water resource challenges in the Mekong River Basin, FISH 101. February 20, 2015.
·∙ The Nitrogen Cycle. University of Washington, CENV 110. Autumn 2011-2014.
·∙ Using Stable Isotopes in Ecology. Short course at the University of Washington, May 25, 2012
·∙ Nuts and Bolts of Measuring Stable Isotopes. Short course at the University of Washington,
October 26, 2010
·∙ What is a sustainable fishery? A global perspective with a case study of Bristol Bay, Alaska.
University of Oregon, October 28, 2009
·∙ Introduction to oxygen dynamics in lakes and streams. University of Washington, BIOL/FISH 473.
October 9, 2008 & October 16, 2009
·∙ Would we recognize a sustainable fishery if we saw one? University of Oregon, October 25, 2006
Based on Bevans Series lecture by D. Schindler
·∙ Introduction to aquatic chemistry. University of Washington, BIOL/FISH 473. October 4, 2006
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Stable Isotopes in Ecology (2 day short course). University of Washington, April 20, 2006
Fish out of water: how bears and salmon affect stream ecosystems. Achievement Rewards for
College Scientists spring luncheon, April 14, 2006
·∙ The carbonate system in freshwaters. University of Washington, BIOL/FISH 473. October 25, 2005
·∙ Oxidation-reduction reactions in lakes. University of Washington, BIOL/FISH 473. October 27,
2004
·∙ Fishes of San Francisquito Creek. Stanford University, May 24, 1999; May 19, 2000
·∙ Global environmental change. Las Positas College, September 8, 1999
·∙ Biodiversity. Las Positas College, December 8, 1998
·∙ Behind the scenes at the Steinhart Aquarium. California Academy of Sciences, October 17, 1996;
March 12, 1997; September 20, 1997; September 16, 1998
·∙ Aquarium systems. Las Positas College, September 10, 1997; February 4, 1998; September 9, 1998
Teaching/Course Assistant
·∙ Introductory Biology for Majors, University of Washington, Winter 2004
·∙ Jasper Ridge Biological Preserve Docent Class, Stanford University, Winter & Spring 2000
·∙ Field Studies in Earth Systems, Stanford University, Spring 2000
·∙ Introduction to Earth Systems, Stanford University, Winter 1999
·∙ Geosphere, Stanford University, Autumn 1999
·∙ Core Biology Lab, Stanford University, Spring 1999
STUDENT AND POST-DOCTORAL TRAINING
Post-doctoral Fellows
·∙ Thomas K. Pool, University of Washington, (2014-present).
Graduate Students (committee chair)
·∙ Benjamin Miller, University of Washington, PhD (2014-present
·∙ Michael Vlah, University of Washington, MS (2014-present)
Graduate Students (committee member)
·∙ Carling Beig, University of Guelph, MS (2014-present)
·∙ William Chen, University of Washington, MS (2015-present)
·∙ Keith Fritschie, University of Washington, MS (2013-present)
·∙ William Gagne-Maynard, University of Washington, MS (2013-present)
·∙ KathiJo Jankowski, University of Washington, PhD (2009-2014)
·∙ Yue Shi, University of Washington, PhD (2014-present)
G.W. Holtgrieve
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·∙ Adrianne Smits, University of Washington, PhD (2013-present)
·∙ Mergia Sonessa, University of Washington, PhD (2014-present)
·∙ Amanda Tan, University of Washington, PhD (2014-present).
Undergraduate Students
·∙ Jordan Lee, University of Washington, directed research (2014)
·∙ Anne Gower, University of Washington, directed research (2014)
·∙ Veronica Tamsitt, University of Washington, directed research (2012)
·∙ Sydney Clark, University of Washington, directed research (2012)
·∙ Janelle Miller, University of Washington, directed research (2009–2010)
·∙ Conrad Gowell, University of Puget Sound, directed research, coauthor (2007–2010)
·∙ Marissa Smith, University of Washington, directed research (2008).
UNIVERSITY SERVICE
College Committees
·∙ College of the Environment Diversity & Inclusion Committee, member, 2013-present
·∙ College of the Environment, Future of Ice Faculty Search Committee, member, 2014
School Committees
·∙ School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, Future of Ice Faculty Search Committee, member, 2015
·∙ School of Oceanography, Future of Ice Faculty Search Committee, member, 2015
·∙ School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences Spring Seminar Series, co-organizer, 2015
·∙ School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, Recruitment, Admission, and Scholarship Committee,
member, 2014
General Service
·∙ School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, spring seminar co-coordinator, 2015
·∙ Grant reviewer for Royalty Research Fund, Autumn 2014 & Spring 2015
OTHER PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES
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Guest Subject Matter Editor for Ecological Applications, 2015
Journal referee: J. Atmospheric Environment, BioScience, Continental Shelf Research, Ecology,
Ecosystems, Environmental Management, Environmental Science & Technology, J. Geophysical
Research-Biogeosciences, Hydrobiologia, Limnology & Oceanography, Limnology &
Oceanography: Methods, J. North American Benthological Society, Oikos
·∙
External reviewer for Washington Department of Ecology report on nitrogen attenuation in
Puget Sound Rivers
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International consultant to Mekong River Commission contracted to develop hydrology-fisheries
models of the Mekong River fishery, provide institutional training, and advise on fisheries
monitoring protocols (with J. Sabo).
US research collaborator on two Partnerships for Enhanced Engagement in research (PEER)
science proposals with the Inland Fisheries Research and Development Institute of Cambodia.
Member, National Ecological Observing Network (NEON), Reaeration and Metabolism Technical
Working Group, 2011–present
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PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT
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COMPASS science communication training, October 16-18, 2013
Eco-DAS IX, American Society for Limnology and Oceanography early career symposium,
October 11–16, 2010
HHMI Future Faculty Fellows Workshop, August 24–25, 2010
HHMI Teaching Apprenticeship Program, 2010
G.W. Holtgrieve
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MEMBERSHIPS
American Geophysical Union, American Society for Limnology and Oceanography, Ecological Society
of America, Global Lakes Ecological Observing Network (GLEON)
G.W. Holtgrieve
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