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Laurie Hall

Picture of Laurie Hall

U. C. Berkeley Graduate Student

Brief Biography:

My research interests are focused on the effects of population connectivity, via the dispersal of individuals, on population dynamics of threatened and endangered wildlife.  I use a combination of direct and indirect techniques to measure dispersal, including mark-recapture, radio-telemetry, genetics, and stable isotope chemistry.  In addition, I am interested in understanding long-term changes in connectivity and population dynamics in response to habitat loss and fragmentation and climate change.
After receiving my B.S. in Marine Science from Southampton College in New York, I moved to California to pursue a Master’s degree at Moss Landing Marine Laboratories.  My thesis characterized the dispersal patterns of an endangered seabird, the Marbled Murrelet, using genetic population assignments.  In addition to my Master’s research I have participated in a number of research projects including aerial surveys of California’s marine mammal and leatherback sea turtle populations, collection of data and specimens from beach-cast marine mammals and seabirds, and the design of sea turtle deterrents for fishing nets in Baja, Mexico. 
My current dissertation work compares connectivity and metapopulation dynamics of two species of wetland bird: the California Black Rail (Laterallus jamaicensis) and the Virginia Rail (Rallus limicola).  The California Black Rail is a small and secretive bird that is patchily distributed in California with the greatest densities of birds occurring in the San Francisco Bay area, the Sierra Foothills, and the Imperial Valley.  Anecdotal evidence suggests Black Rails are poor flyers and likely have limited dispersal capabilities.  In contrast, Virginia Rails are distributed in wetlands throughout California, and because of their larger size, they likely disperse greater distances and more frequently than Black Rails.  In addition to differences in dispersal ability among Black and Virginia Rails, differences in habitat among Black Rail metapopulations in California offer an interesting comparison of connectivity and metapopulation dynamics within the species.  The bay area wetlands where Black Rails are found are large (mean =68.2 ha), with varying salinities and are separated by greater distances than the wetlands of the foothills.  The wetlands in the foothills are smaller (mean =3.63 ha), composed of fresh water and are closely aggregated.  In the Imperial Valley Black Rails utilize moderately sized (mean =32.5 ha) freshwater wetlands.  Among these regions, differences in wetlands such as habitat area, distance between habitat patches, and water availability may cause differences in the connectivity of habitat patches, which can in turn affect Black Rail metapopulation dynamics.

Publications and Presentations

Beissinger, S. R., Girard, P., Takekawa, J. Y., and Hall, L. A.  2010.  Connectivity Within and Between Black Rail Metapopulations: Implications for Persisting Under Rising Sea-Levels.  Poster presented at the Bay-Delta Science Conference, held September 20-22, 2010 in Sacramento, CA.
Peery, M. Z., Hall, L. A., Sellas, A., Beissinger, S., Moritz, C., Bérubé, M., Raphael, M, Nelson, K., Golightly, R., McFarlane-Tranquilla, L., Newman, S., and Palsbøll, P. J.  2010.  Genetic analyses of historic and modern marbled murrelets suggest decoupling of migration and gene flow after habitat fragmentation.  Proceeding of the Royal Society of London B.
Hall, L. A., Harvey, J. T., Palsbøll, P. J., Bérubé, M., Golightly, R., Newman, S., Raphael, M., McFarlane-Tranquilla, L., Nelson, S. K., Peery, M. Z.  2009.  Characterizing dispersal patterns in a threatened seabird with limited genetic structure.  Molecular Ecology. 
Peery, M. Z., Beissinger, S. R., House, R. H., Bérubé, M., Hall, L. A., Selas, A., and Palsbøll, P. J.  2008.  Characterizing source-sink dynamics with genetic parentage assignments.  Ecology 89 (10):2746-2759. 

 

Undergrads:

Maybellene Gamboa:

I am an undergraduate at the University of California, Berkeley in the Department of Environmental Sciences and the Department of Integrative Biology. I joined the Black Rail Project in the summer of 2010 where I focused on tracking California Black Rails and Virginia Rails using radio telemetry. With this data, I am able to estimate the home range of these birds during their breeding season. When I'm not following birds with a handheld receiver and antennae, I enjoy researching issues in conservation biology and evolution especially with regards to mammalogy and ornithology.



Clint Cleveland:

(Bio in progress)