Welcome to my website. I have built this website to share my interests and provide updates about my work. I completed my PhD at the Department of Wildlife, Fish and Environment Studies in the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences in November 2016. My PhD project aimed to improve the link between movement ecology and wildlife management, using the moose as an example. I published a review that included a conceptual framework, along with two papers about the movement ecology of moose and a methods paper that provides guidance to an existing method.
In January'17 I began a four year post-doctoral position with the Department of Animal Ecology and Physiology, in collaboration with The Netherlands Institute for Terrestrial Ecology (NIOO) and the Dutch Centre for Field Ornithology (SOVON). My research is part of a project called CHIRP, which aims to understand the Cumulative Human Impact on biRd Populations. I study the Eurasian oystercatcher, which has been declining rapidly in recent decades. The project aims to understand the causes of the decline and thus which actions need to be prioritised to conserve the oystercatcher. We aim to develop the research in such a way that it can be transferred to other species as well.
My general interests lie in conservation and previously I have done research and worked in remote destinations like the Peruvian Amazon, Madagascar and Costa Rica. I have also been involved in a project that investigates factors influencing the survival of Black Guillemot in the Baltic sea. The project has involved camera trapping, monitoring nests and check survival and colour ringing of adults and chicks. You can read more about the project here.
In January'17 I began a four year post-doctoral position with the Department of Animal Ecology and Physiology, in collaboration with The Netherlands Institute for Terrestrial Ecology (NIOO) and the Dutch Centre for Field Ornithology (SOVON). My research is part of a project called CHIRP, which aims to understand the Cumulative Human Impact on biRd Populations. I study the Eurasian oystercatcher, which has been declining rapidly in recent decades. The project aims to understand the causes of the decline and thus which actions need to be prioritised to conserve the oystercatcher. We aim to develop the research in such a way that it can be transferred to other species as well.
My general interests lie in conservation and previously I have done research and worked in remote destinations like the Peruvian Amazon, Madagascar and Costa Rica. I have also been involved in a project that investigates factors influencing the survival of Black Guillemot in the Baltic sea. The project has involved camera trapping, monitoring nests and check survival and colour ringing of adults and chicks. You can read more about the project here.