A-SWEL

Applied, Spatial Wildlife Ecology

Dr. Jennifer Mullinax is an assistant professor of wildlife ecology at the University of Maryland.  She has been teaching wildlife and natural resources classes at the University of Maryland since 2011.  As of 2022, Dr. Mullinax is teaching the following classes:

ENST 460:  Principles of Wildlife Ecology and Management: Ecological principles and requirements of wildlife as the basis for management, and introduction to the scientific literature. Conflicts in wildlife management, government administration of wildlife resources, legislation, and history of the wildlife management profession.

ENST 487:  Environmental Conflicts and Decision Making in Natural Resource Management: Study major cases which focus on environmental science with a concentration on the role and techniques of negotiation, collaborative decision making, and adaptive resource management as an environmental conflict resolution process.

ENST 602: Research Principles and Methodology in Environmental Science and Technology: Fundamental research strategies and methods of investigation in Environmental Science and Technology including field and laboratory procedures.

ENST 689: Applied Spatial Data Analysis for Environmental Science and Technology: Teaches applied spatial analysis skills through several case studies, including such topics as combining disparate spatial data sources, identifying spatial characteristics of specific field sites, identifying landscape change over time, and spatial techniques used to identify similarities or model relationships.