University of Michigan
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

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Annette Ostling

Annette Ostling

  • Assistant Professor
    Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley, Energy and Resources, December 2004

Contact information

  • University of Michigan
    2005 Kraus Natural Science Building
    830 North University
    Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1048
  • Phone: (734) 936-2898
  • Fax: (734) 763-0544
  • Email: aostling@umich.edu

Fields of study

Community ecology

Academic background

Ph.D. University of California, Berkeley, Energy and Resources, December 2004
M.S. University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, Physics, 1999
AB Columbia University, Physics, 1994

Graduate students

Susanna Messinger, Judith Wan (Ph.D. program, co-advise with Phil Myers), Brain Sedio (Ph.D. program, co-advise with Chris Dick), Gyorgy Barabas, Rafael D'Andrea

Postdoctoral fellows

Rosalyn Rael (joint with Pacific Ecoinformatics and Computational Ecology Lab)

Former personnel

(Postdocs) Jeffrey Lake (Assistant Professor, Adrian College, MI), David Alonso (Postdoc, University of Groningen).
(Undergraduates) Kyle Anderson, Todd Baker, Petrina Smith, Sreya Vempatti, Carlin Ziska, Zachary Brym (Graduate Student, Utah State, Daniel Cummins, Andrea Maguire (Graduate Student, Michigan State University). (High school students) Shan Kothari

Publications

UM affiliation

  • Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

Related news

Messinger lands Yale postdoc

Recent EEB graduate, Dr. Susanna Messinger, accepted a  Gaylord Donnelley Postdoctoral Environmental Fellowship through the Yale Institute for Biospheric Studies.

IBM grant for teaching ecological modeling and computation

Annette OstlingProfessor Annette Ostling has been awarded an IBM Equipment Grant for her project "A teaching initiative in ecological modeling and computation, and the development of a new tool for community ecology research."

Inspiring girls in science and math

Professor Annette Ostling and graduate student Susanna Messinger worked with a small group of seventh and eighth grade girls for a week this summer as part of a new ecology focus group for a U-M WISE-GISE summer camp.