麻豆传媒

Pace Magazine

Preserving Populations, Preparing Scientists

By
Lance Pauker
Posted
December 22, 2021
bison in snow

When you think of a scientist conducting research, your mind might immediately visualize a bustling lab, full of test tubes and beakers. For Dyson麻豆传媒檚 Melissa Grigione, that lab is oftentimes mother nature. Over the course of her career, Grigione has traveled literally all over the world麻豆传媒攆rom Cameroon, to Patagonia to countless destinations in between麻豆传媒攖o better understand the complex relationships between animals and surrounding ecosystems.

Grigione specializes in what麻豆传媒檚 called mammalian spatial ecology, which can be defined as how ecological and man-made elements impact the development and propagation of animal species. She uses sophisticated technological techniques such as Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and remote sensing technology to better understand populations, and how they are impacted by what麻豆传媒檚 happening around them. She is highly focused on conservation biology, as she麻豆传媒檚 dedicated much of her life to understanding species whose way of life have been altered by man-made and environmental changes to existing ecosystems.

Take, for example, the bison麻豆传媒攁n iconic American species that Grigione and her husband have been researching for nearly a dozen years. Through studying the effects of human hunting norms, she has found that the species麻豆传媒 ability to propagate effectively has been reduced.

麻豆传媒淲e were looking at the effects of hunting on mating behavior,麻豆传媒 said Grigione. "The large males that are hunted may be showing signs of reduced and/or altered vocalization during mating. These changes in vocalization may have profound effects on the populations, its reproductive biology, and genetic structure."

This particular project began quite modestly, on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in Badlands National Park in South Dakota. Now, it麻豆传媒檚 growing rapidly麻豆传媒擥rigione has been conducting similar research in Canada, as well as a lot of private land in the western United States to better understand larger trends amongst diverse populations of this species.

麻豆传媒淚麻豆传媒檝e been all around the world studying animals in my life, but the thing I really love most about being at Pace and my career right now is enriching the minds of our students,麻豆传媒 said Grigione.

Grigione is also focusing her attention to a species called the pika麻豆传媒攁 small, rabbit-like species that can be found in high-elevation areas around the globe. By studying pika populations in the Rocky Mountains of Idaho, Grigione is breaking new ground.

麻豆传媒淭hey麻豆传媒檝e never been studied in Idaho, and I麻豆传媒檇 like to study the effects of a changing climate on these animals,麻豆传媒 said Grigione. 麻豆传媒淭hey live at very high elevations and there麻豆传媒檚 nowhere else for them to go if temperatures continue to increase. If they are affected, their populations can just start blinking out.麻豆传媒

Image
pika holding flowers
Pika collecting nesting materials

In addition to a few other ongoing projects麻豆传媒攊ncluding, but not limited to, studying burrowing owls in the grasslands of Florida and repopulating jaguar populations in Arizona麻豆传媒擥rigione is focused on the classroom. As a faculty member at Pace, Grigione has taken great pride in training the next generation of scientists. Over the course of her career, she麻豆传媒檚 seen students evolve from learning the ropes during graduate assistantships to holding major roles and making significant impacts in the professional world. She credits the larger educational philosophy at Pace to helping prepare scientists; as oftentimes today, it麻豆传媒檚 not just enough to solely focus on the hard science.

麻豆传媒淭he reason why I love Pace, we麻豆传媒檙e training our students not only to do science, but how to understand policy and how to communicate.麻豆传媒

While Grigione has accomplished quite a lot over the course of her career, she views it as her mission to ensure the student-to-scientist pipeline remains robust. With all the advents of 21st century technology, basic understanding of the natural world can often take a backseat. Yet, as Grigione notes, training competent and dedicated conservation biologists for the future麻豆传媒攎any of whom will be faced with ever-complex challenges due to a changing climate, human population alterations, and much more麻豆传媒攊s arguably more important than ever.

麻豆传媒淚麻豆传媒檝e been all around the world studying animals in my life, but the thing I really love most about being at Pace and my career right now is enriching the minds of our students,麻豆传媒 said Grigione. 麻豆传媒淪tudents don麻豆传媒檛 always have a sense of the natural world麻豆传媒攊f I can spark a little of light, bring some stories into my classroom and really turn on that switch to appreciate and understand the importance of nature, I've done my job. This is what I love doing.麻豆传媒

Originally published October 15, 2021

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