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Avery P. Hill, PhD Profile
Avery P. Hill, PhD

@avephill

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Mapping the ecosystems of present and future with community science data. Postdoc at the @calacademy he/him or they/them. Mastodon: @[email protected]

Joined July 2018
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@avephill
Avery P. Hill, PhD
1 year
A new, gradient concept of native (where a species is more or less native to a place based on environment) is compatible with the traditional understanding but also provides a clear, unifying re-framing of native to help us understand where species belong in a changing world
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@avephill
Avery P. Hill, PhD
1 year
An ethics paper about how the dichotomous understanding of "nativeness" traditionally used to describe species (e.g. a species is either native or non-native to a place) becomes confusing and less useful as the climate and environment change and species move locations in response
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@avephill
Avery P. Hill, PhD
1 year
I have a new paper out in ๐˜›๐˜ฉ๐˜ฆ ๐˜‘๐˜ฐ๐˜ถ๐˜ณ๐˜ฏ๐˜ข๐˜ญ ๐˜ฐ๐˜ง ๐˜ˆ๐˜จ ๐˜ข๐˜ฏ๐˜ฅ ๐˜Œ๐˜ฏ๐˜ท๐˜ช๐˜ณ๐˜ฐ๐˜ฏ๐˜ฎ๐˜ฆ๐˜ฏ๐˜ต๐˜ข๐˜ญ ๐˜Œ๐˜ต๐˜ฉ๐˜ช๐˜ค๐˜ด called "Nativeness as gradient: Towards a more complete value assessment of species in a rapidly changing world" https://t.co/jRVHfA60w5 #ecology #ethics #climatechange
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link.springer.com
Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics - Conservation biologists recognize a duty to maintain as much value as possible in ecosystems that are threatened by recent anthropogenic impacts....
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@earth_chris
๐ŸŒ chris
2 years
It's rewarding to hear a leading voice in the industry recognize the launch of this product - the culmination of the past seven years of my career - as a milestone for both @planet and for the EO sector as a whole
@aravindEO
Aravind ๐ŸŒ ๐Ÿ›ฐ
2 years
Recently, @planet announced the launch of its Forest Carbon Diligence product - a global, 30-meter historical time series of forest carbon, as well as tree height and cover, expected to be used in carbon accounting projects.
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@avephill
Avery P. Hill, PhD
3 years
While it's surreal to see a chapter of my dissertation in NYT, I'm grateful for the opportunity to bring the conversation about impending ecological transitions and their implications to a broad audience. Thanks to coauthors @chrfield @connornolan @khemesphere @trevorcambron
@nytimes
The New York Times
3 years
A warming climate has created "zombie forests." A fifth of the conifer forests that blanket California's Sierra Nevada are left stranded in habitats that no longer suit them, according to a new Stanford University study.
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@LoisParshley
Lois Parshley
3 years
Really important research this week found that climate change is creating โ€œzombie forestsโ€ in California. The Sierra Nevada has already warmed by about 1.2 degrees C, which means a fifth of conifer forests in the Sierra Nevada are now in places that have grown too hot for them.
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@calacademy
California Academy of Sciences
3 years
Whatโ€™s a zombie forest? Californiaโ€™s conifers are temporarily cheating death as temperatures rise faster than the trees can shift their range. Research led by Academy postdoc @avephill maps the impact, & could inform conservation methods. Learn more here: https://t.co/OQHfBhneVf
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@GVD__
Grace van Deelen
3 years
Some forests in the Sierra Nevada are mismatched to their climate, which raises questions about how to manage them in the future. My latest in @Sierra_Magazine: https://t.co/gvBG4CHNjB
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sierraclub.org
Almost one-fifth of conifer forests in the Sierra are living in places too hot for them to regenerate. Should we do anything about it?
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@StanfordWoods
Stanford Woods Institute
3 years
As the climate changes, trees struggle to keep up. A new Stanford study finds ~20% of all Sierra Nevada conifers are no longer suited to the climate around them. After a major disturbance like a wildfire, they likely will not return. ๐ŸŒฒ Read more: https://t.co/e8q1NTJlsj
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@RebaFay
Dr. Rebecca F. Johnson
3 years
Yesterday was a beautiful day for our #SolsticeSeaStarSearch! We found five species, enjoyed magnificent weather & tidepooling conditions, a lovely sunset & good company & we took our first team photo!
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@avephill
Avery P. Hill, PhD
3 years
I started a postdoc in the Center for Biodiversity and Community Science at the CA Academy of Sciences. Iโ€™m excited to develop an intimate understanding of the process by which the data we collect can ultimately shape our relationships to the ecosystems around us
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@mviteri64
Maria Viteri
4 years
I'm so excited to share the culmination of my primary PhD research in the lab of @LizHadly! We analyzed thousands of bones from raptor pellets and subfossil deposits to track small mammal community change in the Anthropocene ๐Ÿ€๐Ÿ‡๐Ÿฟ
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@LizHadly
Elizabeth Hadly
4 years
Today is a big day in the @hadlylab of #TheAnthropocene. So many are graduating!! Am thrilled and proud and excited to see them change the world! @mviteri64 @kate_lagerstrom @decathlonserge @avephill @jordie7m Vrinda Suresh, Lucas Pavan, and Dorothy Tovar!!
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@jeffreysmithJRS
Jeffrey Smith
4 years
Excited to share this new paper out this week in @PNAS with a great team of co-authors led by @OrnithoAle w/ @earth_chris, @rafaelmongecr, @beckyck, @katherinelauck and others examining how biodiversity and infrastructure drive tourism in Costa Rica! https://t.co/eZx9Vxgwsf (1/7)
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@avephill
Avery P. Hill, PhD
4 years
An enormous thanks is due to all those that offered scientific, emotional, and material support throughout
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@avephill
Avery P. Hill, PhD
4 years
We found that 2 tree species in the western US, douglas firs and canyon live oaks, are shifting their range edges to cooler and wetter regions, and do so at a much greater rate in areas that have recently burned from wildfires
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@avephill
Avery P. Hill, PhD
4 years
I feel very privileged to present my first scientific publication, coauthored with @chrfield. It was a long road to publication (first submitted fall of 2019), but the science (and myself as a scientist) matured significantly throughout the process.
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nature.com
Nature Communications - Tree species that are expanding their distribution in response to climate change could be hindered or facilitated by disturbances. Here the authors analyse forest inventory...
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@mviteri64
Maria Viteri
4 years
So excited to share my first publication, co-authored by Allison Stegner and @LizHadly! We use pellets from Yellowstone to confirm that raptors faithfully sample local small mammal diversity. ๐Ÿฆ‰๐Ÿ€
cambridge.org
Assessing the reliability of raptor pellets in recording local small mammal diversity - Volume 106
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@avephill
Avery P. Hill, PhD
4 years
My friend @mviteri64 just published! "In conclusion, analysis of raptor pellets remains a promising method for accurately and non-invasively sampling past and modern small mammal communities." https://t.co/3KbB8lbhUw
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