
Ph. D. Assistant Professor
North Dakota State University
Department of Biological Sciences
119 Stevens Hall
Fargo, ND 58108-5517
Lab Phone: (701)231-5902
Office Phone: (701)231-8246
Fax: (701)231-7149
E-mail: m.e.clark@ndsu.nodak.edu
My general research interests are in population ecology and
quantitative ecology. In particular, I am interested in how
changes and interactions among individuals translate to changes
at the population level. I have explored this in a variety of
systems including fish, mammals and birds. Current research is
aimed at understanding the potential for physiological changes
induced by behavioral interactions among individuals to act as
a mechanism for density dependence in populations of wetland
birds. A critical component to this work is the incorporation
of field and laboratory studies to delineate proximate factors
with simulation models that quantify these effects across
generations and at larger scales.
University of Tennessee Mathematics B.A., 1987
University of Tennessee Ecology Ph.D., 1996
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Iowa State Univerity
University of Montana
•Clark, M. E., K. A. Rose, D. A. Levine, and W. W. Hargrove.
2001. Predicting global change effects on brook and rainbow
trout in southern Appalachian streams: combining GIS and
individual-based modeling. Ecological Applications
11:161-178.
•Clark, M. E., and K. A. Rose. 1997. Factors affecting
competitive dominance of rainbow trout over brook trout in
southern Appalachian streams. Transactions of the American
Fisheries Society 126:1-20.
•Clark, M. E., K. A. Rose, J. A. Chandler, T. J. Richter, D. J.
Orth, and W. Van Winkle. 1998. Simulating smallmouth bass
reproductive success in reservoirs subject to water level
fluctuations. Environmental Biology of Fishes 51:161-174.
•Clark, M. E., and K. A. Rose. 1997. An individual-based
modeling analysis of management strategies for enhancing brook
trout populations in southern Appalachian streams. North
American Journal of Fisheries Management 17:54-76.
•Bronikowski, A. M., M. E. Clark, H. Rodd, and D. N. Reznick.
2002. Population-dynamic consequences of predator-induced
life-history variation in the guppy (Poecilia reticulata).
Ecology 83:2194-2204.
•Clark, M. E., and T. E. Martin. In review. Tradeoffs in avian
life history traits and consequences for population
growth.
•Clark, M. E., and L. J. Gross. 1990. Periodic solutions to
nonautonomous difference equations. Mathematical Bioscience
102:105-119.
•Santelmann, M., K. Freemark , D. White, J. Nassauer , M.
Clark, B. Danielson , J. Eilers, R. Cruse, S. Galatowitsch, S.
Polasky , K. Vache, J. Wu, 2001. Applying Ecological Principles
to Land-Use Decision Making in Agricultural Watersheds. Pages
226-252 in V. H. Dale and R. A. Haeuber, editors. Applying
Ecological Principles to Land Management. Springer-Verlag, New
York, New York.
•Rose, K. A., J. H. Cowan, Jr., M. E. Clark, E. D. Houde, and
S. B. Wang. 1999. An individual-based model of bay anchovy
population dynamics in the mesohaline region of Chesapeake Bay.
Marine Ecology Progress Series 185:113-132.
•Clark, M. E., and K. A. Rose. 1997. Individual-based model of
stream-resident rainbow trout and brook char: model
description, corroboration, and effects of sympatry and
spawning season duration. Ecological Modelling 94:157-175.
Teaching:
Zoology - Fish Biology (Spring of 2003)
Zoology 452 - Ichthyology (Fall of 2003)
Zoology 674/474- Fish Management: Analysis of Fish and Wildlife Populations (Spring of 2004) announcement for this class