Group Members

Current members

Associate Professor
Email: kirwan@vims.edu

Education

B.S., College of William and Mary (Geology and Mathematics)

Ph.D., Duke University (Earth and Ocean Sciences)

In many environments exhibiting rapid geomorphic change, landscapes evolve by a combination of physical, biological, and anthropogenic forces. In my research, I aim to better understand how these coupled processes influence the

formation and survival of large scale landscapes, and how they respond to climate change. Most of my work takes place in salt marshes and other coastal environments, where knowledge of these “eco-geomorphic” feedbacks is often 

important for human welfare and ecosystem management. This work currently focuses on applying concepts of eco-geomorphology to better predict: 1) how coasts respond to sea level rise, 2) carbon-climate feedbacks, and 3) coastal resilience.

Lab & Field Manager and M.S. Student
Email: tcmesserschmidt@vims.edu

Intersts: Camping, Concerts, Drone Photography, and water sports.

Ph.D. Student
Email: gdmolino@vims.edu
Advisor: Dr. Matthew Kirwan

Education

B.S., Geology, Brown University.

My interdisciplinary research interests center on the current and future drivers of coastal land use change with sea level rise. I have several active projects which use a combination of geospatial analyses and field methods to assess drivers of  and barriers to coastal land use change. One of my current studies uses large-scale, high-resolution datasets to tease out physical and ecological drivers that are most influential in controlling the transition of uplands into marsh 

across the Chesapeake Bay. I am also working on a project which combines field work and machine learning to examine the influence of people on coastal land use by quantifying the effectiveness of actions landowners have taken to protect private property from inundation. These studies build off of my completed project which predicted future marsh migration areas in the Chesapeake region under different sea level rise scenarios (see citation in Publications section).  I strive to make my research useful for a range of stakeholders who are working to address the impacts of sea level rise on coastal communities and manage future land use changes within the coastal zone.

Ph.D. Student
Email: mbarksdale@vims.edu
Advisors: Dr. Chris Hein and Dr. Matt Kirwan

Education

B.A., Bowdoin College 

MAT, University of Mississippi

My research broadly focuses on how processes related to sea-level rise drive changes in coastal ecosystem functioning. To answer questions related to these interests, I currently employ stratigraphic, geochemical, GIS, and modeling tools. Specifically, my first project quantifies carbon erosion along a migrating barrier island system in an attempt to 

understand how landward migration of barrier islands due to sea-level rise influences the carbon storage capacity of the system. My second project involves a numerical transect model that tracks ecogeomorphological change of a salt marsh experiencing sea-level rise acceleration. The addition of model components that simulate commonly-used marsh restoration strategies allows us to assess the effectiveness of those restoration strategies on various metrics of marsh health and resiliency over time.  

Postdoctoral Research Associate
Email: sswittyngham@vims.edu

Education

B.S., Marine Biology, Environmental Studies, Florida International University

M.S., Marine Science, San Francisco State University

Ph.D., Marine Science, Virginia Institute of Marine Science at William & Mary

I am broadly interested in understanding how anthropogenic and climate-driven variables influence wetlands on the individual plant, ecosystem, and landscape scales. Specifically, my research examines 1) how abiotic and biotic factor  

influence plant functional traits (chemical, morphological, and/or physical features), 2) how changes in these traits relate to coastal ecosystem resilience to climate change and anthropogenic disturbance, and how we can use plant functional traits to assess management efficacy and enhance restoration success. Currently, I have two active projects. The first examines the effects of burrowing, herbivorous crabs on salt marsh carbon stocks and the second evaluates how prescribed fire, herbicide, and salt application affect the traits of the invasive common reed, Phragmites australis, and influence its distribution at the marsh-forest boundary in coastal Maryland.

Postdoctoral Research Associate
Email: nebruns@vims.edu

Education

B.A., Public Policy Analysis, Duke University

M.E., Computer Science, Cornell University

Ph.D., Ecology, Duke University

I am studying the impacts of pant-soil feedbacks on future carbon accumulation in salt marsh under elevated temperature, CO2, and sea level by integrating 1) simple dynamic models, 2) complex dynamic models, and 3) experimental data. The simple models are theory-based, mechanistic models of plant physiology and soil

biogeochemistry. The complex models forecast carbon accumulation in marsh and capture elevation-dependent, or eco-geomorphic, feedbacks. The data are from an ongoing marsh manipulation experiment at the Smithsonian Institute of Environmental Research where temperature and CO2 conditions have been actively elevated in a salt marsh. I am generally interested in how different modeling approaches produce different insights into how ecosystems function and much enjoy conversations about modeling philosophy and the histories of ecosystem ecology and geomorphology. My PhD was in river ecosystem ecology, investigating the consequences of phytoplankton “growth-in-motion” during river transit on the spatial structure and function of river ecosystems. Before that, I worked as a professional data scientist on problems in avian informatics as part of the eBird team at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. There, I developed novel modeling approaches enabled by machine learning for 1) continent-scale species distribution modeling and 2) acoustic detection.

Undergraduate Students

Lexy Bodor

Kristin Eittreim

Matthew Watts

Anna Wilkinson

Trinity Meredith

Alumni

Orencio Duran Vinent

Assistant Professor
Texas A&M University

Amy Langston

Assistant Research Professor

Desert Research Institute

Kendall Valentine

Assistant Professor
University of Washington Seattle

Ellen Herbet

Senior Scientist
Ducks Unlimited

Daniel Coleman

Postdoctoral Fellow

University of Georgia

David Walters

Researcher, USGS Patuxent 

Wildlife Research Center

Nathalie Jung

Postdoctoral Research Associate, Texas A&M University

Anthony Rietl

Sr. Environmental Scientist
CA Dept of Fish and Wildlife

Alexander Smith

Postdoctoral Fellow Smithsonian Environmental Research Center

Yaping Chen

Assistant Professor, Sun Yat-sen University, China

Former William & Mary Thesis Students

Josh Himmelstein

David Nicks

Megan Gillen

Emily Hall