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RUN GLOBAL
SEARCH ON THIS RESEARCHER Name: Scott, Mark
Telephone: 864.654.6346 ext. 14
Email: scottm@dnr.sc.gov
Organization:
South Carolina Department of Natural Resources
153 Hopewell Road
Pendleton, South Carolina 29670
Position at Coweeta LTER: Principle Investigator
Specialty: Aquatic ecology; conservation biology with particular
emphasis on endemic fishes
Habitat: Watersheds; streams and rivers
Organism: Freshwater vertebrates
Core Area(s): Disturbance; Regionalization; Modeling/Synthesis
Education:
B.S., Wofford College, Biology, 1987
M.S., Virginia Tech, Fisheries & Wildlife Sciences, 1994
Ph.D., University of Georgia, Ecology, 2001
Appointments:
Research Biologist, SC Dept. Natural Resources, 2003-Present
Adjunct Asst. Professor, Dept. Forestry & Natural Resources, Clemson
University, 2003-Present
Publications (Five as examples of research foci):
Scott, M.C. In review. Winners and losers among stream fishes in relation
to watershed disturbance legacies and urban sprawl in the southeastern
U.S. Biological Conservation.
Scott, M.C., G.S. Helfman, M.E. McTammany, E.F. Benfield, and P.V.
Bolstad. 2002. Multiscale influences on physical and chemical stream
conditions across Blue Ridge landscapes. Journal of the American Water
Resources Association 38(5):1379-1392.
Scott, M.C., and G.S. Helfman. 2001. Native invasions, homogenization,
and the mismeasure of integrity of fish assemblages. Fisheries
26(11):6-15.
Hall, L.W. Jr., M.C. Scott, and W.D. Killen Jr., and M.A. Unger. 2000. A
probabilistic ecological risk assessment of tributyltin in surface waters
of the Chesapeake Bay watershed. Human and Ecological Risk Assessment
6:141-179.
Scott, M.C., and L.W. Hall Jr. 1997. Fish assemblages as indicators of
environmental degradation in Maryland coastal plain streams. Transactions
of the American Fisheries Society 126(3):349-359.
Synergistic Activities:
Scientific collaborations with university, state & federal agency, and
non-governmental organization personnel; active in professional societies
and local governance.
Outreach activities - invited contributor to An Encyclopedia of Southern
Appalachian Forest Ecosystems, a hypertext document summarizing current
state of knowledge about ecology and management of Appalachian forests
sponsored by USDA Forest Service Southern Research Station at URL:
http://forestencyclopedia.net/Encyclopedia/Appalachian.
Invited contributor to The Encyclopedia of Appalachia, sponsored by the
National Endowment for the Humanities, scheduled for release in 2005. |