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Dr. Kathleen C. Weathers

Ecosystem Scientist | PhD, Rutgers University

Expertise
air-land-water interactions, heterogeneous landscapes, ecological importance of fog, air pollution, team science: training and research

Profile (pdf)

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Kathleen Weathers studies how ecosystem processes are affected by global changes within and among aquatic, airborne, and terrestrial systems.

Weathers is an expert on fog, which carries not only water, but nutrients, pollutants, and pathogens to the coastal and montane ecosystems it enshrouds. She studies feedbacks among ocean, air, and fog- dominated forests and, recently, how fog may affect transfer of pathogens from water to land.

As part of a long-term collaboration with Alexandra Ponette-González (University of Utah), students, and colleagues, Weathers is studying the effects of mineral dust and black carbon. Mineral dust can deliver toxic pollutants to ecosystems and is a growing concern as climate change exacerbates drought. Black carbon is known to cause lung and heart disease. This collaborative team is studying the role of vegetation in abating black carbon in urban areas.

From cyanobacteria to cyberinfrastructure, Weathers has spent the last two decades studying the impact of climate change on lakes. She was co-chair of the Global Lake Ecological Observatory Network (GLEON) for 10 years, guiding GLEON from its infancy to adulthood. The GLEON network’s aim: Through international team science, understand, predict, and communicate lakes’ response to environmental change using in-situ and remotely sensed data. This work encompasses impacts from human activities, including climate change, road salting, and land use.

Weathers and her colleagues have created a new model for interdisciplinary, network research that empowers early career scientists. The GLEON Fellowship Program/Lake Expeditions, designed and led by Weathers and Paul C. Hanson of UWisconsin, engages student cohorts in learning and using leadership and collaborative skills (a.k.a., team science) as well as cutting-edge analytical tools — such as machine learning — to answer pressing research questions focused on lakes. To date, five cohorts and more than 50 graduate students have been trained through this ‘career- and life-changing’ fellowship program.

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Weathers, Kathleen C., J. Collett, C. Jordan, R. Gerraud, P. Matrai, M. O’Rourke, A. Torregrosa, and L. Borre. 2014. “Fog Research Frontiers: An Interdisciplinary Research Agenda for Coastal Fog Systems”. http://caryinstitute.org/reprints/weathers_coastal_fog_as_a_system_white_paper_2014.pdf.
Goring, Simon J, Kathleen C. Weathers, Walter K. Dodds, Patricia A Soranno, Lynn C. Sweet, Kendra S. Cheruvelil, John S Kominoski, Janine Rüegg, Alexandra M Thorn, and Ryan M. Utz. 2014. “Improving the Culture of Interdisciplinary Collaboration in Ecology by Expanding Measures of Success”. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 12 (1): 39-47. doi:10.1890/120370.
Rodríguez, Alexandra, Gary M. Lovett, Kathleen C. Weathers, Mary A. Arthur, Pamela H. Templer, Christine L. Goodale, and Lynn M. Christenson. 2014. “Lability of C in Temperate Forest Soils: Assessing the Role of Nitrogen Addition and Tree Species Composition”. Soil Biology and Biochemistry 77: 129-40. doi:10.1016/j.soilbio.2014.06.025.
Heffernan, James B., Patricia A Soranno, Michael J Angilletta, Lauren B Buckley, Daniel S Gruner, Tim H Keitt, James R Kellner, et al. 2014. “Macrosystems Ecology: Understanding Ecological Patterns and Processes at Continental Scales”. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 12 (1): 5-14. doi:10.1890/130017.
McGowan, Katharine A., Frances Westley, Evan D. G. Fraser, Philip A. Loring, Kathleen C. Weathers, Flor Avelino, Jan Sendzimir, Rinku Roy Chowdhury, and Michele-Lee Moore. 2014. “The Research Journey: Travels across the Idiomatic and Axiomatic Toward a Better Understanding of Complexity”. Ecology and Society 19 (3). doi:10.5751/ES-06518-190337.
Carey, Cayelan C., Kathleen C. Weathers, Holly A. Ewing, Meredith L. Greer, and Kathryn L. Cottingham. 2014. “Spatial and Temporal Variability in Recruitment of the Cyanobacterium Gloeotrichia Echinulata in an Oligotrophic Lake”. Freshwater Science 33 (2): 577-92. doi:10.1086/675734.
Carey, Cayelan C., Kathryn L. Cottingham, Nelson G. Hairston, and Kathleen C. Weathers. 2014. “Trophic State Mediates the Effects of a Large Colonial Cyanobacterium on Phytoplankton Dynamics”. Fundamental and Applied Limnology Archiv für Hydrobiologie 184 (4): 247-60. doi:10.1127/1863-9135/2014/0492.
Weathers, Kathleen C., Paul C. Hanson, P. Arzberger, Jennifer A. Brentrup, J. Brookes, Cayelan C. Carey, E. Gaiser, et al. 2013. “The Global Lake Ecological Observatory Network (GLEON): The Evolution of Grassroots Network Science”. Limnology and Oceanography Bulletin. http://avto.aslo.info/bulletin/13_v22_i3.pdf.
Gioda, Adriana, Olga L. Mayol-Bracero, Frederick N. Scatena, Kathleen C. Weathers, Vinicius L. Mateus, and William H. McDowell. 2013. “Chemical Constituents in Clouds and Rainwater in the Puerto Rican Rainforest: Potential Sources and Seasonal Drivers”. Atmospheric Environment 68: 208-20. doi:10.1016/j.atmosenv.2012.11.017.
Greer, Meredith L., Holly A. Ewing, Kathryn L. Cottingham, and Kathleen C. Weathers. 2013. “Collaborative Understanding of Cyanobacteria in Lake Ecosystems”. The College Mathematics Journal 44 (5): 376-85. doi:10.4169/college.math.j.44.5.376.
Schwarz, Kirsten, Kathleen C. Weathers, Steward T. A. Pickett, Richard G. Lathrop, Richard V. Pouyat, and Mary L. Cadenasso. 2013. “A Comparison of Three Empirically Based, Spatially Explicit Predictive Models of Residential Soil Pb Concentrations in Baltimore, Maryland, USA: Understanding the Variability Within Cities”. Environmental Geochemistry and Health 35 (4): 495-510. doi:10.1007/s10653-013-9510-6.
Solomon, Christopher T., D. A. Bruesewitz, D.C. Richardson, Kevin C. Rose, Matthew C. Van de Bogert, Paul C. Hanson, Timothy K. Kratz, et al. 2013. “Ecosystem Respiration: Drivers of Daily Variability and Background Respiration in Lakes Around the Globe”. Limnology and Oceanography 58. American Society of Limnology and Oceanography, Inc.: 849–866. doi:10.4319/lo.2013.58.3.0849.
Sullivan, T. J., G. B. Lawrence, Scott W. Bailey, T. C. McDonnell, C. M. Beier, Kathleen C. Weathers, G. T. McPherson, and D. A. Bishop. 2013. “Effects of Acidic Deposition and Soil Acidification on Sugar Maple Trees in the Adirondack Mountains, New York”. Environmental Science & Technology 47 (22): 12687-94. doi:10.1021/es401864w.
Lovett, Gary M., Mary A. Arthur, Kathleen C. Weathers, and Jacob M. Griffin. 2013. “Effects of Introduced Insects and Diseases on Forest Ecosystems in the Catskill Mountains of New York”. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 1298: 66-77. doi:10.1111/nyas.12215.
Murray, Georgia L. D., Kenneth D. Kimball, Bruce Hill, Jane E. Hislop, and Kathleen C. Weathers. 2013. “Long-Term Trends in Cloud and Rain Chemistry on Mount Washington, New Hampshire”. Water, Air, & Soil Pollution 224 (9). doi:10.1007/s11270-013-1653-7.
Lovett, Gary M., Mary A. Arthur, Kathleen C. Weathers, Ross D. Fitzhugh, and Pamela H. Templer. 2013. “Nitrogen Addition Increases Carbon Storage in Soils, But Not in Trees, in an Eastern U.S. Deciduous Forest”. Ecosystems. doi:10.1007/s10021-013-9662-3.
Simkin, Samuel M., Barbara L. Bedford, and Kathleen C. Weathers. 2013. “Phytotoxic Sulfide More Important Than Nutrients for Plants Within a Groundwater-Fed Wetland”. Ecosystems 16 (6): 1118-29. doi:10.1007/s10021-013-9671-2.
Nelson, Sarah J., Katherine E. Webster, Cynthia S. Loftin, and Kathleen C. Weathers. 2013. “Shifts in Controls on the Temporal Coherence of Throughfall Chemical Flux in Acadia National Park, Maine, USA”. Biogeochemistry. doi:10.1007/s10533-013-9884-7.
Carey, Cayelan C., Holly A. Ewing, Kathryn L. Cottingham, Kathleen C. Weathers, R.Q. Thomas, and J. F. Haney. 2012. “Occurrence and Toxicity of the Cyanobacterium Gloeotrichia Echinulata in Low-Nutrient Lakes in the Northeastern United States”. Aquatic Ecology 46 (4): 395-409. doi:10.1007/s10452-012-9409-9.
Kelly, Victoria R., Kathleen C. Weathers, Gary M. Lovett, and Gene E. Likens. 2012. “A Comparison of Two Collectors for Monitoring Precipitation Chemistry”. Water Air Soil Pollut. 223: 951-54. doi:10.1007/s11270-011-0912-8.