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Northeast Climate Science Center Director Announced


Northeast Climate Science Center Director Announced

Northeast Climate Science Center Director Announced

AMHERST, Mass. — Mary Ratnaswamy has been selected as the director of the Department of the Interior’s Northeast Climate Science Center, headquartered at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. 

Ratnaswamy will be the first permanent director of the center, which is one of eight regional Climate Science Centers recently established and managed by the U.S. Geological Survey.

The national network of regional Climate Science Centers will provide land managers in federal, state and local agencies access to the best science available regarding climate change and other landscape-scale stressors impacting the nation’s natural and cultural resources.

“Our natural environment is responding to changing climate in a myriad of ways as reflected in water availability, fire frequency, rising seas, altered plant and animal communities, and storm intensity,” said USGS Director Marcia McNutt. “Under the leadership of Mary Ratnaswamy, the USGS has every expectation that the Northeast Climate Science Center will achieve its goal of providing science information and tools to allow resource managers and citizens alike to anticipate, measure, and appropriately adapt to these changing conditions on the local and regional scale, where decisions matter most to communities at risk.”

In addition to the University of Massachusetts, other partner institutions in the Northeast Climate Science Center include the College of Menominee Nation in Kashena, Wis.; Columbia University; the Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Mass; the University of Minnesota; the University of Missouri at Columbia; and the University of Wisconsin at Madison.

“The consortium is extremely lucky to have the leadership of Mary Ratnaswamy as our first permanent director of the Northeast Climate Science Center,” said Richard Palmer, the principal investigator for the center and head of the Civil and Environmental Engineering Department at UMass Amherst.  “Mary brings an uncommon combination of research skills, management experience and personal grace to this position.  We feel confident that Mary will be an exceptional director.”  

Since 2008, Ratnaswamy has been a research manager at the USGS’ largest biological science center, the USGS Patuxent Wildlife Research Center in Laurel, Md.  There she directs the Migratory Birds, Coastal and Wetlands, and Ecosystems programs, and supervises 15 research scientists as well as other staff.  As one of three senior research directors, she works closely with the center director and other managers to build and direct the science mission and operations of the center. 

Prior to joining USGS, she supervised the Endangered Species Program at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Chesapeake Bay Field Office for eight years, with special emphasis on recovery of the endangered Delmarva fox squirrel. 

Her early research career focused on coastal and marine ecosystems, beginning with undergraduate research on coastal mangroves in Costa Rica while completing her Bachelor’s of Science degree at Carleton College in Minnesota. She earned a Master’s of Science degree in Oceanography from the University of Rhode Island, where her research explored population dynamics of fin whales along the Atlantic coast. 

After obtaining her Master’s degree, she returned to Costa Rica to work at the Green Turtle Research Station in Tortuguero.  Ratnaswamy subsequently worked for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration for five years, where her work included conducting fisheries and bathymetric surveys in Alaska, Hawaii and California, and oceanographic current research in the Caribbean. 

Her doctorate in Forest Resources at the University of Georgia was based on research to understand raccoon predation of sea turtle nests. After receiving her doctorate, she took a position as Assistant Professor at University of Missouri-Columbia, where she taught at both graduate and undergraduate levels.

Rastnaswamy will assume her new duties in September 2012. Rachel Muir, science advisor for the USGS Northeast Area, has served as the center’s interim director since March 2012, when the center was first funded, and will remain with the center in a support role until 2013.

The Climate Science Centers are managed by the National Climate Change and Wildlife Science Center located at the USGS headquarters in Reston, Va.  Staff from the center can be reached at  (703) 648-6016 or by emailing dbeard@usgs.gov.  Visit the National Climate Change and Wildlife Center or the Climate Science Centers website for more information.  

USGS Newsroom


More information

Parameter Value Description
Magnitude mb The magnitude for the event.
Longitude ° East Decimal degrees longitude. Negative values for western longitudes.
Latitude ° North Decimal degrees latitude. Negative values for southern latitudes.
Depth km Depth of the event in kilometers.
Place Textual description of named geographic region near to the event. This may be a city name, or a Flinn-Engdahl Region name.
Time 1970-01-01 00:00:00 Time when the event occurred. UTC/GMT
Updated 1970-01-01 00:00:00 Time when the event was most recently updated. UTC/GMT
Timezone offset Timezone offset from UTC in minutes at the event epicenter.
Felt The total number of felt reports
CDI The maximum reported intensity for the event.
MMI The maximum estimated instrumental intensity for the event.
Alert Level The alert level from the PAGER earthquake impact scale. Green, Yellow, Orange or Red.
Review Status Indicates whether the event has been reviewed by a human.
Tsunami This flag is set to "1" for large events in oceanic regions and "0" otherwise. The existence or value of this flag does not indicate if a tsunami actually did or will exist.
SIG A number describing how significant the event is. Larger numbers indicate a more significant event.
Network The ID of a data contributor. Identifies the network considered to be the preferred source of information for this event.
Sources A comma-separated list of network contributors.
Number of Stations Used The total number of Number of seismic stations which reported P- and S-arrival times for this earthquake.
Horizontal Distance Horizontal distance from the epicenter to the nearest station (in degrees).
Root Mean Square sec The root-mean-square (RMS) travel time residual, in sec, using all weights.
Azimuthal Gap The largest azimuthal gap between azimuthally adjacent stations (in degrees).
Magnitude Type The method or algorithm used to calculate the preferred magnitude for the event.
Event Type Type of seismic event.
Event ID Id of event.
Event Code An identifying code assigned by, and unique from, the corresponding source for the event.
Event IDS A comma-separated list of event ids that are associated to an event.

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