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Conditions Raise Threat of High-Elevation Wildfires, Professor Finds

We are in the heart of wildfire season in California. Last spring, UC Merced professor and climate expert John Abatzoglou wrote that the western United States appeared to be headed for another perilous period.

Warm weather and severe drought could make even high mountain areas, normally too wet to burn, susceptible to flame, according to a study authored by Abatzoglou and a team of fire and climate scientists and engineers.

Conditions like these are a recipe

for wildfire disaster

Professor John Abatzoglou

“Conditions like these are a recipe for wildfire disaster,” Abatzoglou and his team partners wrote in May for The Conversation news site.

While historical fire suppression and other forest management practices are commonly cited as reasons for the West’s worsening fire problem, high-elevation forests have had little human intervention, according to The Conversation article. The danger to these largely untouched areas is a clear indication climate change is enabling these normally wet forests to burn, the article said.

“High-elevation fires have implications for natural and human systems,” according to the article. “High mountains are natural water towers that normally provide a sustained source of water to millions of people in dry summer months. The scars that wildfires leave behind … affect how much snow can accumulate at high elevations. This can influence the timing, quality and quantity of water that reaches reservoirs and rivers downstream.”

Professor Osborne Leads New UC Center for Climate Justice

A UC Merced professor is leading a system-wide push to address climate change as a social justice and equity issue.

The Center for Climate Justice, launched last spring, will be guided by Tracey Osborne, a UC Presidential Chair in the Department of Management of Complex Systems and the Management of Innovation, Sustainability and Technology (MIST) program.

The center will leverage the power of the UC system to address not only the root causes of climate change, but the range of associated social, racial and environmental injustices.

It will gather researchers, educators, activists, policymakers, philanthropists, indigenous community leaders and people from the private sector to fight for climate justice in California and beyond.

“While economic concerns and technology are important, we need a different approach guided by equity and justice,” Osborne said. “This is important because it brings a larger and more diverse group of people to the table who can relate to climate change from a justice perspective.”

Study Looks at People Recovering from COVID-19 at Home

Hospitals taxed to their limit and beyond by COVID-19 patients is among the most chilling effects of the global pandemic. However, little is known about people who tested positive for the virus and either decided or were directed to recover at home.

Health Psychology Professor Jennifer Hahn-Holbrook is working with colleagues from UCLA and the University of Illinois in a study to determine how people might best deal with COVID-19 at home. Hahn-Holbrook, director of the Lactation Attachment Technology and Child Health (LATCH) Lab, helped design the United COVID Survivor Study and will assist with data analysis.

The study asks participants to provide anonymous information about their experiences with the virus and whether any over-the-medications or home remedies appeared to ease their symptoms. Potential participants can get more information about the study and choose to take part at this website.

Millions of people have recovered from COVID-19 at home, and we want to harness survivors' knowledge so we can find answers that will help people speed their recovery.

Professor Jennifer Hahn-Holbrook

Academic Senate Honors Colleagues for 2020-21 Year

Academic Senate awards for the 2020-21 year honored faculty for outstanding teaching, research, impacts on their fields and mentorship, in addition to dedication to diversity and scholarly public service.

“One of the reasons I am at UC Merced is to contribute to the development of our campus and our academic community,” said mechanical engineering Professor Ashlie Martini, recipient of the Excellence in Faculty Mentorship Award. “Seeing the growth and success of my colleagues brings me great joy and pride in our campus.”

Academic Senate is the group through which faculty members share in the governance, operation and management of the university. Members determine academic policy; set conditions for admission and degree-granting; and advise the administration on various issues.

Said developmental psychology Professor Jenny Howell, who received the Distinguished Early Career Research Award: “Science is a team sport, and I know I wouldn’t have received this distinction without the help of my incredible colleagues, collaborators, graduate students and undergraduates.”

Estee Beck

Merritt Writing Program Has a New Director

A professor with a deep understanding of the intersection of pedagogy and diversity is the new director of the Merritt Writing Program. Estee Beck comes to UC Merced from the University of Texas at Arlington, where she coordinated the professional and technical writing program for the last four years.

Beck, who served on the UTA faculty for six years, has developed courses in multi-modal rhetoric, technical communication, research methods in rhetoric and composition. She also assembled graduate courses in scholarly publication, surveillance and privacy, and technical writing.

School of Social Sciences, Humanities and Arts Dean Jeff Gilger said Beck is a valuable addition to the Merritt program, which allows students to explore the art of critical thinking, craft their written expression, reflect broadly on their college education, and consider a range of pre-professional and academic opportunities.

Beck succeeds Associate Teaching Professor Paul Gibbons, who served as interim director for two years. Gibbons has returned to the faculty of the Merritt program and the Global Arts Media and Writing Studies Department.

Professor Behre Tapped to Lead Federal Office of Science

In a memorable Earth Day 2021 for Asmeret Asefaw Berhe, President Joe Biden used the international observation of environmental stewardship to nominate the UC Merced professor to lead the federal Department of Energy’s Office of Science.

Berhe, widely recognized for work in the field of biogeochemistry, would oversee an office that has a $7 billion annual budget and is best known for funding physics and running national laboratories. Her nomination requires Senate approval. If confirmed, she would be the first person of color to lead the office.

Her research in the School of Natural Sciences’s Department of Life and Environmental Sciences combines soil science, global change science and political ecology, with an emphasis on how the soil system regulates climate and the relationship between the natural environment and human communities.

“She’s as star scientist as star scientists get,” soil ecologist Bala Chaudhary of DePaul University told Science magazine.

UC Merced Student Wins Grad Slam

Shayna Bennett had only three minutes. She made them count.

The applied mathematics graduate student’s compact yet compelling presentation of her UC Merced dissertation research was enough to win the University of California Grad Slam final on May 7.

Her video presentation of “A New Tool to Fight Invasive Species” bested students from the nine other UC campuses. Bennett won $7,000 and the competition’s microphone-like trophy, known as the Slammy.

Bennett said the Slammy is on display on a bookshelf along with a congratulatory note from Chancellor Muñoz and her favorite book — “Revolt in the Desert” by T.E. Lawrence.

As a Ph.D. student in Professor Shilpa Khatri’s lab, Bennett studies numerical methods to understand how landscape features such as rivers, roads and mountains affect the spreading rate and pattern of invasive species.

“Invasive species spread differently depending on what they encounter in the landscape,” Bennett said. “I am trying to develop the mathematical and the computational tools to model this process and be able to capture what the species would be doing to allow us to understand how the species spreads, thereby controlling invasive species.”

This fall, she plans to work on the dissertation paper and serve on the new Campus Experience Survey Workgroup.

WELCOME

Academic Personnel

FEBRUARY 1 — AUGUST 6, 2021


  • Adeyemi Adebiyi
  • Zenaida Aguirre-Munoz
  • Myles Ali
  • Wethhasinghage Amith
  • Maheshwaran Athithan
  • Estee Beck
  • Lindsay Crawford
  • Nicola Cullen
  • Sakin Erin
  • Michael Findlater
  • Mindy Findlater
  • Fatima Gamino
  • Si Gao
  • Weisong Gao
  • Blythe George
  • Vanessa Guerra
  • Vivek Gupta
  • Nader Inan
  • Jason Isbell
  • Ada Nina Johnson-Kanu
  • Gokcen Kestor
  • Andrew King
  • Andrew Lazar
  • Ashling Leilaeioun
  • Jiajun Liang
  • Robert Lopez
  • Sophia MacVittie
  • Ralph McAnelly
  • Ashley Metzger
  • Keila Luna Monterrey
  • Bailey Morrison
  • Christopher Ojeda
  • James Orgaja
  • Andrea Polonijo
  • Arun Raj
  • Chloe Ray
  • Jose Cobena Reyes
  • Andro Rios
  • Rafael Rodrigues Del Grande
  • Manuchehr Shahrokhi
  • Christian Smith
  • Jeffrey Stenzel
  • Haochen Sun
  • John Thompson
  • Imrinder Toor
  • Amber Villalobos
  • Brittany Willess
  • Alexander Wolff
  • Yiran Xu
  • Yanting Zhao