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Kurt P. Kowalski
About
Can we find innovative control approaches for Phragmites australis (Common Reed) and other invasive plant species of concern to resource managers?
What is the role of hydrologic connectivity in the rehabilitation and adaptive management of diked and coastal wetland ecosystems in the Laurentian Great Lakes and throughout the nation?
What is the landscape-scale potential for coastal wetland habitat rehabilitation throughout the Great Lakes basin?
These are a few of the research questions that Dr. Kowalski has been working on during his 30+ years at the Great Lakes Science Center. His master’s work in GIS and remote sensing at EMU and doctoral studies at U-M provided a solid foundation for extensive work with U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service refuges (Detroit River, Ottawa, Seney, Shiawassee), U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, The Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization, Ohio DNR, Michigan DNR, The Nature Conservancy, Ducks Unlimited, and many other partners. Dr. Kowalski studied the diked and coastal marshes of western Lake Erie for many years and continue to work with managers to apply site specific results at regional scales. His research program also focuses on the ecology and management of invasive plants (e.g., Phragmites australis), including efforts to develop a non-toxic bioherbicide and find species-specific treatments that target the plant at the molecular level. Leadership experiences at the National Conservation Leadership Institute and within USGS have helped him produce some innovative science and push research teams in new directions.
Publications
- Cattail invasion of sedge/grass meadows in Lake Ontario: photointerpretation analysis of sixteen wetlands over five decades
- A water-budget approach to restoring a sedge fen affected by diking and ditching
- Use of historical and geospatial data to guide the restoration of a Lake Erie coastal marsh
- Mapping invasive Phragmites australis in the coastal Great Lakes with ALOS PALSAR satellite imagery for decision support
- Differences in sedge fen vegetation upstream and downstream from a managed impoundment
See (https://www.usgs.gov/staff-profiles/kurt-p-kowalski) for updated publication list
PhD, University of Michigan (aquatic ecology)
MS, Eastern Michigan University (geography, GIS and remote sensing)
B.S. University of Michigan (natural resources policy and behavior)