Expertise

I am a broadly trained community ecologist interested in how interactions between consumers and their resources affect ecosystem structure and function.

My research aims to understand biodiversity-ecosystem function relationships. I focus on how animal functional diversity affects nutrient cycling in coastal, esturine, and desert environments.

Current Projects:

  • Burrowing crab effects on coastal wetland functions along successional gradients.
  • Top-down effects of consumers on biological soil crust functions.
  • Cascading effects of prey physiological stress responses on consumer-biological soil crust interactions.
  • Effects of climate-driven shifts in predator communities on prey behavior and population dynamics.
  • Evaluating the recovery trajectories of ecosystem functions in restored and created tidal wetlands along the northern Gulf of Mexico.
  • Viewing ecological field studies through the lens of environmental ethics.

 

Past Affiliations

PhD Student, Graduate Group in Ecology, Graduate Studies, University of California, Davis (past)

Communities
Ecology
Degrees
PhD, University of California, Davis, sarinehart@ua.edu, 2018
BSc, University of Rhode Island, Biological Sciences, 2013