 
        
    
        Matthias Leu
Professor and Chair
                                	            Office:
    	                	                    Integrated Science Center 3267
                    	               
	            	                           	            Phone:
    	                	                    757-221-7497
                    	               
	            	                           	            Email:
    	                	                    [[mleu]]
                    	               
	            	                           	            Read more:
    	                	                    {{https://sites.google.com/view/leulab/home}}
                    	               
	            	               
Areas of Specialization
I am a conservation biologist with a broad interest in how human actions influence ecological processes and biodiversity. My research focuses on large-scale approaches that model the human footprint, the cumulative effects of human actions across large-scales, and how humans affect species distributions. In addition, I am also interested in how climate variability and change affect species distribution and demography. In all my research I strive to provide tools, in the form of spatially-explicit models, which can be implemented in conservation actions.
Teaching
- Conservation Biology
- Human-Wildlife Conflicts in the Anthropocene
- GIS for Biologists
- Marine Ecology and Conservation
- Experimental Design
Background
Year of arrival: 2009Professor College of William and Mary
Previous Positions:
- Conservation Biology in the Biology Department at 亚洲色吧, 2009
- Ecologist with the USGS, 2003-2009
- Post Doctoral in Dr. Steve Knick's lab with NRC, 2002-2003
- Post Doctoral in Dr. Marzluff's lab investigating the effects of campgrounds on the distribution on songbird nest predators, 2001-2002
Education:
- University of Washington, B.S. Zoology, 1992
- University of Washington, M.S. Wildlife Management and Conservation, 1995
- University of Washington, Ph.D. Wildlife Management and Conservation, 2000
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