Clay Morrow is a quantitative ecologist and statistician with nine years of experience applying genomics, chemical ecology, spatial statistics, and systems modeling to real-world conservation and forest-health problems. Currently a Research Ecologist at the U.S. Forest Service, he develops harmonized remote-sensing models to detect and track invasive insect disturbances, building on postdoctoral and doctoral research in community dynamics and plant defense. He combines rigorous statistical training (MS in Biometry) with hands-on field and lab experience from New Mexico to Wisconsin, and has consulted on experimental design and analysis for academic researchers. Comfortable with both code and ecology, Clay translates complex data into actionable management insights and scalable analytical tools that bridge remote sensing, genomics, and ecological theory.
9 years of coding experience
7 years of employment as a software developer
Master of Science - MS, Biometry/Biological statistics, Master of Science - MS, Biometry/Biological statistics at University of Wisconsin-Madison
Bachelor of Science - BS, Wildlife, Fish and Wildlands Science and Management, Bachelor of Science - BS, Wildlife, Fish and Wildlands Science and Management at New Mexico State University
Contributions:34 pushes, 1 branch, 1 issue in 1 month
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Clay Morrow - Research Ecologist at U.S. Forest Service