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US > BRAD MCRAE

Spatial Ecologist
Background:
Brad began his career as an electrical engineer, designing printer
electronics before returning to school to earn a Master's degree in
Land Resources at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He did plant
and wildlife ecology field work for the Forest Service in eastern
Washington before going back to school once again, this time at Northern
Arizona University, where he studied mountain lion population genetics
and habitat connectivity for his PhD. There, he drew on his past career
by applying models from electrical circuit theory to predict gene
flow and explain genetic differentiation between mountain lion populations
across the southwestern USA. After finishing his dissertation, he
worked on connectivity and wildlife population modeling in Oregon
(with the U.S. EPA) and then California (at UC Santa Barbara). He
returned to Washington to take his current position with The Nature
Conservancy in July 2008.
Current Projects/Professional Focus:
Brad is a Spatial Ecologist with the Washington Chapter's planning
team. His primary focus is integrating connectivity into conservation
planning in Washington. He is also involved in efforts to incorporate
climate change into Ecoregional Assessments and Conservation Action
Plans.
Fun Fact:
The first cat Brad ever genotyped was his pet, Nappycat. He had to
take a second sample after the first was contaminated with his own
blood when the angry donor scratched him. |