Summary
Jernej Jevšenak is a postdoctoral researcher with eight years of experience applying quantitative methods to dendrochronology, forest modelling, and climate–carbon interactions. With a PhD in biological sciences and MSc/BSc in forestry, he combines tree-ring science, national forest inventory data and remote sensing to study forest responses to environmental change. He has conducted research at the Slovenian Forestry Institute and TUM, bringing machine learning and wood-anatomical insights to dendroclimatology and large-scale modelling. Jernej is comfortable moving between lab-based core processing and scalable data-driven analyses, often linking fine-scale anatomical time series to broader inventory and satellite datasets. His work uniquely bridges traditional forestry expertise with modern computational tools to quantify carbon and climate signals preserved in tree rings. Based in Freising and Slovenia, he focuses on translating detailed biological measurements into actionable forest-climate knowledge.
8 years of coding experience
2 years of employment as a software developer
Master of Science (MSc), Forestry, Master of Science (MSc), Forestry at University of Ljubljana, Biotechnical Faculty
English, German, Croatian