© Ryo Ogawa

PostDoc

Dr. Ryo Ogawa

Visitor Address:

Hülssebau, HÜL/O 262
Helmholtzstraße 10
01069 Dresden

Tel.+49 351 463-34103
Fax+49 351 463-37064

ryo.ogawa@tu-dresden.de

  • Avian biodiversity and ecosystem services in cultural landscapes
  • Cross-scale study of individual animal movements and the species distributions using GPS, acoustic survey, and bird count data
  • Bayesian model integration using multiple data sources
  • Barela, I., Burger, L. M., Taylor, J., Evans, K. O., Ogawa, R., McClintic, L., & Wang, G. (2020). Does habitat suitability index predict survival of semi-aquatic mammals? Ecology and Evolution, 10, 4867–4875.
  • Ogawa, R., Mortelliti, A., Witham, J. W., & Hunter, M. L. (2017). Demographic mechanisms linking tree seeds and rodent population fluctuations: insights from a 33-year study. Journal of Mammalogy, 98(2), 419–427.

➝ since 05/2022: PostDoc at the Chair of Computational Landscape Ecology at Technische Universität Dresden, Germany.

06/2016-02/2022: Research Assistant at the Department of Wildlife, Fisheries, and Aquaculture, Mississippi State University

 ➝ 01/2016-05/2016: Research Assistant at the Department of Wildlife, Fisheries, and Conservation Biology, University of Maine

  2017-2022: Doctor of Philosophy in Forest Resources, Mississippi State University, the United States; Ph.D. dissertation “Migration ecology of American white pelicans: circannual movement, geographic range, and annual survival”

  2016-2017: Master of Science in Wildlife, Fisheries, and Aquaculture, Mississippi State University, the United States; M.S. thesis: “Spatiotemporal variation in space use by eastern wild turkeys in Mississippi”

  2014-2016: Master of Wildlife Conservation in Wildlife, Fisheries, and Conservation Biology, University of Maine; Non-thesis project: “Spatial and temporal mortality trends of bald eagles in Main from 1962-2015”

  2010-2014: Bachelor of Agriculture in Agriculture, Meiji University, Japan; B.A. thesis: “The influence of the climate in summer on the timing of sows mating after weaning and the frequency of losing early pregnancy”

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ECO²SCAPE Co-design of ecologically and economically efficient policy instruments and measures for conserving biodiversity and ecosystem services in cultural landscapes. Funded by the BMBF within the framework of the  “Research Initiative for the Conservation of Biodiversity” (16LW0079K, 01.10.2021 – 30.09.2024) –> Project website of ECO²SCAPE