Kimberly Novick

Associate ProfessorDirector, Ph.D. Program in Environmental Science at Bloomington School of Public and Environmental Affairs

Schools

  • Bloomington School of Public and Environmental Affairs

Links

Biography

Bloomington School of Public and Environmental Affairs

Education

  • Ph.D., Environmental Science, Duke University Nicholas School of the Environment, 2010
  • B.S.E., Duke University, 2002

Courses

  • Applied Mathematics for Environmental Science
  • Watershed Hydrology
  • Environment and People
  • SPEA Math CAMP (week-long summer intensive)

Biography

Kimberly Novick is an environmental scientist who joined SPEA''s faculty in 2012. Her work combines principles from biometeorology, plant physiology, and hydrology. Research interests include the biophysical determinants of ecosystem carbon uptake and water use, advancing biometeorological observation approaches, and exploring tradeoffs between tree growth, drought sensitivity, and resistance to insect outbreak. Recently, Novick has investigated how drought affects a range of forest processes; her research is focused on fingerprinting the biophysical mechanisms that determine ecosystem-scale carbon and water cycle fluxes.

Novick runs a dynamic lab with her students with research taking place at a range of field research sites. Their work is focused on understanding the links between climate, land management, and carbon and water cycling in eastern U.S. forests. Locations include the Morgan-Monroe Flux Tower, one of the longest running flux monitoring towers in the Ameriflux network, the Coweeta Hydrologic Laboratory, and the Crossett Experimental Forest in southern Arkansas. More details about these project are available on her lab website.

She received her B.S.E. in Civil and Environmental Engineering from Duke University in 2002, returning in 2005 for her Ph.D. Novick''s doctoral work at Duke focused on measuring and interpreting long-term records of forest carbon and water cycling and was situated in the Duke Forest FACTS-1 and FACE experiments. Her post-doctoral training took place at the Coweeta Hydrologic Laboratory, a USDA Forest Service experimental forest in western North Carolina. At Coweeta, Novick explored the role of topography in mediating ecosystem-scale fluxes of carbon dioxide and evapotranspiration. Novick''s work has been published in several environmental science journals, including Agricultural and Forest Meteorology, Global Change Biology, Nature Climate Change, Oecologia, and Tree Physiology.

Read about executive education

Other experts

Matthew Birtch

Matthew is a Partner and leads Simon-Kucher’s Transaction Services & Private Equity (TSPE) practice in North America, working out of its San Francisco office. Matthew’s primary areas of focus are in pre deal and include: Market Entry Target Search & Screen Commercial Due Diligence Priv...

Jeffrey Sweeney

## Education - Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) University of Colorado Boulder (2009 — 2017.05) - Master of Business Administration (Executive M.B.A.) Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University (2004 — 2006) - Bachelor’s Degree Colorado State University - College of Business (1994 — 1997)...

Paul Bennett

My research explores the relationship between identity performance and gendered organisational cultures and discourses. My PhD thesis examined the impact of Neighbourhood Policing (NP) on police staff within the British Police service. NP become an integral part of policing and has had a signif...

Looking for an expert?

Contact us and we'll find the best option for you.

Something went wrong. We're trying to fix this error.