Summary
Amanda Frazier is a Postdoctoral Fellow based in Davis, California, with eight years of research experience exploring fish physiology, ecology, and multi-omics to assess adaptive capacity to environmental change. She completed a PhD at UC Davis following a hands-on background in marine science and chemistry from the University of Miami and Colorado Boulder, blending fieldwork, lab techniques, and computational analysis. Her work bridges organismal physiology and large-scale data—using R and GIS during a research internship to investigate anthropogenic impacts in Antarctic benthic ecosystems. Amanda has a strong track record of communicating complex results, from weekly project briefings to mentoring and advising students, and she’s skilled at designing and executing independent research projects. She brings a practical interdisciplinary perspective that connects genomic-level insights to real-world conservation and management questions. Colleagues describe her as a methodical scientist who pairs curiosity-driven inquiry with reproducible, data-forward approaches.
8 years of coding experience
Master of Science - MS, Zoology/Animal Biology, Master of Science - MS, Zoology/Animal Biology at University of California, Davis
Monarch High School
Chemistry, Chemistry at University of Colorado Boulder
Bachelor of Science (B.S.), Marine Science, Biology, Ecosystem Science and Policy, Senior, Bachelor of Science (B.S.), Marine Science, Biology, Ecosystem Science and Policy, Senior at University of Miami
German, Spanish