THE TROPHIC ECOLOGY OF
CONSUMER–RESOURCE DYNAMICS
IN A CHANGING WORLD

I am a Washington Research Foundation postdoctoral fellow in the School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences at the University of Washington.
As a trophic ecologist with expertise in fish and parasite ecology, I explore the dynamics of fish parasitism as a consumer–resource interaction and how anthropogenic and global change processes modulate this relationship.
My work has taken me from the depths of coral reefs to the heights of museum shelves.
As a trophic ecologist with expertise in fish and parasite ecology, I explore the dynamics of fish parasitism as a consumer–resource interaction and how anthropogenic and global change processes modulate this relationship.
My work has taken me from the depths of coral reefs to the heights of museum shelves.