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American biologist
Joe Roman
Nationality American Alma mater Harvard University University of Florida Scientific career Fields Conservation biology Institutions University of Vermont
Joe Roman is a
conservation biologist , academic, and author of the books Whale
[1] and
Listed: Dispatches from America's Endangered Species Act .
[2] His
conservation research includes studies of the historical population size of
whales ,
[3] the role of cetaceans in the
nitrogen cycle ,
[4] the relationship between biodiversity and disease, and the genetics of invasions.
[5] He is the founding editor of "Eat the Invaders", a website dedicated to controlling invasive species by eating them.
[6]
Roman is a Fellow at the
Gund Institute for Ecological Economics at the
University of Vermont .
[7] He earned an
AB with Honors in Visual and Environmental Studies from
Harvard University in 1985
[8] and an
MA in
wildlife ecology and conservation from the
University of Florida .
[7] Roman was awarded his
PhD from Harvard's Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology in 2003; his
dissertation was titled Tracking Anthropogenic Change in the North Atlantic Ocean with Genetic Tools .
[9] During his PhD, he co-authored, with
Stephen Palumbi , a paper for the journal
Science that presented evidence that whale populations had been considerably larger prior to whaling than had previously been thought.
[3]
[9] By 2009, he was working with the Gund Institute with a Science and Technology Policy Fellowship from the
American Association for the Advancement of Science ,
[7] and also beginning a collaboration with the
United States Environmental Protection Agency looking at
loss of biodiversity .
[10] He had a Fulbright Fellowship at the Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina in Brazil in 2012, and he was the 2014–15
[11]
Sarah and Daniel Hrdy Visiting Fellow in Conservation Biology at Harvard.
[12] Born in
Queens , New York, Roman lives in
Vermont .
Books
His book Listed won the 2012
Rachel Carson Environment Book Award from the
Society of Environmental Journalists .
[14]
Journal articles
Roman, Joe; Kraska, James (2016).
"Reboot Gitmo for U.S.–Cuba research diplomacy" (PDF) .
Science . 351 (6279): 1258–1260.
Bibcode :
2016Sci...351.1258R .
doi :
10.1126/science.aad4247 .
PMID
26989232 .
S2CID
206643277 .
Blakeslee, A. M. H.; McKenzie, C. H.; Darling, J. A.; Byers, J. E.; Pringle, J. M.; Roman, J. (2010).
"A hitchhiker's guide to the Maritimes: Anthropogenic transport facilitates long-distance dispersal of an invasive marine crab to Newfoundland" .
Diversity and Distributions . 16 (6): 879–891.
doi :
10.1111/j.1472-4642.2010.00703.x .
S2CID
86012925 .
Echelle, A. A.; Hackler, J. C.; Lack, J. B.; Ballard, S. R.; Roman, J.; Fox, S. F.; Leslie, D. M.; Van Den Bussche, R. A. (2010). "Conservation genetics of the alligator snapping turtle: cytonuclear evidence of range-wide bottleneck effects and unusually pronounced geographic structure".
Conservation Genetics . 11 (4): 1375–1387.
doi :
10.1007/s10592-009-9966-1 .
S2CID
300812 .
Roman, Joe; Darling, John A. (2007). "Paradox Lost: Genetic Diversity and the Success of Aquatic Invasions".
Trends in Ecology and Evolution . 22 (9): 454–464.
doi :
10.1016/j.tree.2007.07.002 .
PMID
17673331 .
Rocha, L. A.; Robertson, D. R.; Roman, J.; Bowen, B. W. (2005).
"Ecological speciation in tropical reef fishes" .
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences . 272 (1563): 573–579.
doi :
10.1098/2004.3005 .
PMC
1564072 .
PMID
15817431 .
Roman, Joseph; Santhuff, Steven D.; Moler, Paul E.; Bowen, Brian W. (1999).
"Population structure and cryptic evolutionary units in the alligator snapping turtle" (PDF) .
Conservation Biology . 13 (1): 135–142.
doi :
10.1046/j.1523-1739.1999.98007.x .
S2CID
53445937 .
Popular articles
“Vulnerable Species in the Crosshairs,” with Ya-Wei Li, The New York Times, July 26, 2018.
“Can the Plover Save New York?” Slate, August 23, 2013.
“Sharks Help Maintain Health of the Oceans,” Wall Street Journal, September 20, 2005.
"Where Bright Lights and Night Life Are Nature's Doing." The Sunday New York Times, March 6, 2005.
"A Place Where All the Snowflakes Are Still Different." The New York Times, January 2, 2004.
References
^
a
b Roman, Joe (2006). Whale .
Reaktion Books .
ISBN
9781861895059 .
^
a
b Roman, Joe (2011). Listed: Dispatches from America's Endangered Species Act .
Harvard University Press .
ISBN
9780674061279 .
^
a
b Roman, Joe;
Palumbi, Stephen R. (2003).
"Whales before whaling in the North Atlantic" (PDF) .
Science . 301 (5632): 508–510.
Bibcode :
2003Sci...301..508R .
CiteSeerX
10.1.1.1025.5800 .
doi :
10.1126/science.1084524 .
PMID
12881568 .
S2CID
22656335 .
^ Roman, Joe;
McCarthy, James J. (2010).
"The Whale Pump: Marine Mammals Enhance Primary Productivity in a Coastal Basin" .
PLoS ONE . 5 (10): e13255.
Bibcode :
2010PLoSO...513255R .
doi :
10.1371/journal.pone.0013255 .
PMC
2952594 .
PMID
20949007 .
^ Roman, Joe; Darling, John A. (2007). "Paradox Lost: Genetic Diversity and the Success of Aquatic Invasions".
Trends in Ecology and Evolution . 22 (9): 454–464.
doi :
10.1016/j.tree.2007.07.002 .
PMID
17673331 .
^ Mishan, Ligaya, “
When Invasive Species Become the Meal ,” New York Times, October 2, 2020.
^
a
b
c
"Joe Roman – Fellow" .
Gund Institute for Ecological Economics ,
The University of Vermont . 2017. Retrieved July 15, 2017 .
^
"Harvard University library record: Notes to accompany Sun drift" .
Harvard University Library . 1985. Retrieved July 15, 2017 .
^
a
b
"Harvard University library record: Tracking anthropogenic change in the North Atlantic Ocean with genetic tools" .
Harvard University Library . 2003. Retrieved July 15, 2017 .
^ Pongsiri, Montira J.; Roman, Joe; Ezenwa, Vanessa O.; Goldberg, Tony L.; Koren, Hillel S.; Newbold, Stephen C.; Ostfeld, Richard S.; Pattanayak, Subhrendu K.; Salkeld, Daniel J. (2009).
"Biodiversity loss affects global disease ecology" (PDF) .
BioScience . 59 (11): 945–954.
doi :
10.1525/bio.2009.59.11.6 .
^
"Joe Roman Awarded 2014-2015 Hrdy Visiting Fellowship" . oeb.harvard.edu (Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology) .
Harvard University . July 29, 2014. Retrieved July 15, 2017 .
^
"The Sarah and Daniel Hrdy Visiting Fellowship in Conservation Biology at Harvard University" . oeb.harvard.edu (Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology) .
Harvard University . 2017. Retrieved July 15, 2017 .
^ Roman, Joe (2023). Eat, Poop, Die: How Animals Make Our World .
Little, Brown Spark .
ISBN
9781805221692 .
^
"Winners: SEJ 11th Annual Awards for Reporting on the Environment" .
Society of Environmental Journalists . October 17, 2012. Archived from
the original on August 24, 2017. Retrieved July 15, 2017 .
External links
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