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Dr. David L. Strayer

Freshwater Ecologist | PhD, 1984, Cornell University

Expertise
Hudson River, invasive species, streams

I am no longer doing new research, but continue to be modestly involved in freshwater ecology. Since retiring, I’ve helped to write several synthesis and review papers (e.g., Geist et al., 2022; Aldridge et al., 2023; Seebens et al., 2025; Dudgeon and Strayer, 2025; Strayer, 2025). Currently, I’m working as part of a team on a paper that critically reviews the composition, biogeography, and conservation of freshwater mussels (Unionida) in the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence basin. I’m also one of more than 100 authors of The Nature Record (https://naturerecord.org/), “the first holistic assessment of U.S. lands, waters, and wildlife, and the benefits they provide.”

I continue to write and speak about ecology for the public (several dozen of my essays are collected here). I recently published a book for general audiences on the wonders of inland-water ecosystems and the remarkable life that they support: ("Beyond the Sea: The Hidden Life in Lakes, Streams, and Wetlands"). (“a wonderfully engaging exploration of the freshwater world, packed with fascinating stories, surprising facts and memorable anecdotes,” FBA News; “a captivating and insightful read,” ASLO Bulletin; “a clear, thought-provoking introduction to the hidden life of inland waters,” Conservation Biology; “a rallying cry to urgently see the beauty and significance of the freshwater environments,” The Geoscientist). I am about to finish a series of essays on extinctions in the world’s fresh waters, and the lessons that they can teach us about how to better manage these important ecosystems.

Finally, I’ve been working with academics and agency biologists on the management of Michigan’s freshwater mussels (an imperiled group of animals). I’ve helped to develop and run a test for mussel identification (now required of contractors who work on freshwater mussels). Joe Rathbun (a retired agency biologist) and I have been teaching a short class on mussel biology and identification.

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Strayer, David L. 1987. “Minor Taxa”. D. W. Webb (ed.). Annual and Selected Bibliography of Benthic Biology for 1986. The North American Benthological Society, Champaign, Illinois.
Likens, Gene E., Jonathan J. Cole, J. Kolasa, J. B. McAninch, M.J. McDonnell, G.G. Parker, and David L. Strayer. 1987. “Status and Future of Ecosystem Science - Cary Conference 1985”. Occasional Publication of the Institute of Ecosystem Studies. Millbrook, NY: Institute of Ecosystem Studies.
Strayer, David L. 1987. “Ecology and Zoogeography of the Freshwater Mollusks of the Hudson River Basin”. Malacol. Rev. 20: 1-68.
Kolasa, J., David L. Strayer, and E. Bannon-O’Donnell. 1987. “Microturbellarians from Interstitial Waters, Streams, and Springs in Southeastern New York”. J. N. Am. Benthol. Soc. 6: 125-32.
Strayer, David L., D.H. Pletscher, Steven P. Hamburg, and S. C. Nodvin. 1986. “The Effects of Forest Disturbance on Land Gastropod Communities in Northern New England”. Can. J. Zool. 64: 2094-98.
Strayer, David L., and Gene E. Likens. 1986. “An Energy Budget for the Zoobenthos of Mirror Lake, New Hampshire”. Ecology 67: 303-13.
Strayer, David L. 1986. “An Essay on Long-Term Ecological Studies”. Bull. Ecol. Soc. Am. 67: 271-74.
Strayer, David L. 1986. “The Size Structure of a Lacustrine Zoobenthic Community”. Oecologia 69: 513-16.
Strayer, David L., J. S. Glitzenstein, Clive G. Jones, J. Kolasa, Gene E. Likens, M.J. McDonnell, G.G. Parker, and Steward T. A. Pickett. 1986. “Long-Term Ecological Studies: An Illustrated Account of Their Design, Operation, and Importance to Ecology”. Occasional Publication of the Institute of Ecosystem Studies. Millbrook, NY: Institute of Ecosystem Studies. http://www.caryinstitute.org/reprints/Occasional_Pub_Number_2-August_1986.pdf.
Strayer, David L. 1985. “The Benthic Micrometazoans of Mirror Lake, New Hampshire”. Arch. Hydrobiol. Suppl. 72, 3: 287-426. http://www.caryinstitute.org/reprints/archiv_1985_Mirror_micrometazoans.pdf.
Strayer, David L. 1985. “Benthic Microinvertebrates”. In G. E. Likens (ed.). An Ecosystem Approach to Aquatic Ecology: Mirror Lake and Its Environment, 228-34. Springer-Verlag New York, Inc.
Strayer, David L., and T. Simmons. 1985. “Minor Taxa”. Webb, D. W. (ed.). Annual and Selected Bibliography of Benthic Biology. North American Benthological Society, Champaign, Illinois.
Moeller, R.E., R. A. Walter, David L. Strayer, and B.J. Peterson. 1985. “The Littoral Region”. In G. E. Likens (ed.). An Ecosystem Approach to Aquatic Ecology: Mirror Lake and Its Environment, 311-17. Springer-Verlag New York, Inc.
Walter, R. A., R.E. Moeller, David L. Strayer, and Jonathan J. Cole. 1985. “The Profundal Region”. In G. E. Likens (ed.). An Ecosystem Approach to Aquatic Ecology: Mirror Lake and Its Environment, 317-22. Springer-Verlag New York, Inc.
Strayer, David L. 1983. “The Effects of Surface Geology and Stream Size on Freshwater Mussel (Bivalvia: Unionidae) Distribution in Southeastern Michigan, U.S.A”. Freshwater Biol. 13: 253-64.
Strayer, David L. 1983. “Pigutiella Blanci, a Naidid Oligochaete New to North America, With Notes on Its Relationships to Piguetiella Michiganensis and Specaria Josinae”. Trans. Am. Microsc. Soc. 102: 349-54.

Articles by David Strayer


Books