The USGS Ecosystems Mission Area (EMA) is encouraging participatory science with its partners. EMA is a leader in participatory science activities and this guidance emphasizes support for this research design model that encourages research projects, as appropriate, to engage in enhanced forms of participatory science.
Linda Weir
Linda Weir is Chief of Staff for the Ecosystems Mission Area. Prior to this role, she was a Research Manager at what is now the Eastern Ecological Science Center for seven years.
She was also a Wildlife Biologist at the center, specializing on amphibians for over a decade. In addition, she has served on a detail as a Budget Coordinator with the Office of Budget, Planning, and Integration. In 2015, Linda served on a Hurricane Sandy detail overseeing the ecological research portfolio for this supplemental appropriation.
Science and Products
Learning More About Waterfowl to Inform Management
Southeast regional and state trends in anuran occupancy from calling survey data (2001-2013) from the North American Amphibian Monitoring Program
Performance of species occurrence estimators when basic assumptions are not met: a test using field data where true occupancy status is known
Annual Report: 2014: Partners in Amphibian and Reptile Conservation (PARC)
Northeast regional and state trends in anuran occupancy from calling survey data (2001-2011) from the North American Amphibian Monitoring Program
North American amphibians: Distribution and diversity
Partners in amphibian and reptile conservation 2013 annual report
Experimental investigation of false positive errors in auditory species occurrence surveys
Improving occupancy estimation when two types of observational error occur: Non-detection and species misidentification
Trends in anuran occupancy from northeastern states of the North American Monitoring Program
Modeling anuran detection and site occupancy on North American Amphibian Monitoring Program (NAAMP) routes in Maryland
North American Amphibian Monitoring Program (NAAMP)
Geographic distribution: Hemidactylium scutatum (four-toed salamander.) USA: Maine
The USGS Ecosystems Mission Area (EMA) is encouraging participatory science with its partners. EMA is a leader in participatory science activities and this guidance emphasizes support for this research design model that encourages research projects, as appropriate, to engage in enhanced forms of participatory science.
Science and Products
Learning More About Waterfowl to Inform Management
Southeast regional and state trends in anuran occupancy from calling survey data (2001-2013) from the North American Amphibian Monitoring Program
Performance of species occurrence estimators when basic assumptions are not met: a test using field data where true occupancy status is known
Annual Report: 2014: Partners in Amphibian and Reptile Conservation (PARC)
Northeast regional and state trends in anuran occupancy from calling survey data (2001-2011) from the North American Amphibian Monitoring Program
North American amphibians: Distribution and diversity
Partners in amphibian and reptile conservation 2013 annual report
Experimental investigation of false positive errors in auditory species occurrence surveys
Improving occupancy estimation when two types of observational error occur: Non-detection and species misidentification
Trends in anuran occupancy from northeastern states of the North American Monitoring Program
Modeling anuran detection and site occupancy on North American Amphibian Monitoring Program (NAAMP) routes in Maryland
North American Amphibian Monitoring Program (NAAMP)
Geographic distribution: Hemidactylium scutatum (four-toed salamander.) USA: Maine
The USGS Ecosystems Mission Area (EMA) is encouraging participatory science with its partners. EMA is a leader in participatory science activities and this guidance emphasizes support for this research design model that encourages research projects, as appropriate, to engage in enhanced forms of participatory science.
The USGS Ecosystems Mission Area (EMA) is encouraging participatory science with its partners. EMA is a leader in participatory science activities and this guidance emphasizes support for this research design model that encourages research projects, as appropriate, to engage in enhanced forms of participatory science.