Forest disturbance, landscape ecology, population genetics, ecosystem modelling

Latest lab news
The lab goes on a retreat at the Koffler Scientific Reserve!
November 2025

Kennedy, Léo and Nooshin travel to Kamloops for the 2025 WRCC: Building Foundational Knowledge Gathering. Léo presented the WRFI lidar project.
October 2025

Sam continues in the lab as a master's student, exploring landscape simulation models!
September 2025

Fynn joins the lab as a master's student, working on characterising surface fuels from lidar data!
September 2025

Nooshin joins the lab as Postdoctoral Fellow, working on the WRFI lidar project!
September 2025

Léo continues in the lab as a Research Assistant, helping with the WRFI lidar project
July 2025

JP, Kate, Jessica, and Sophia presented their research at the 2025 CSEE conference in Sherbrooke! JP presented the talk: “Effects of Connectivity (and Synchrony) on Genetic Differentiation Through Time in Cyclic Outbreaking Populations”
July 2025

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We are a group of disturbance ecologists in the Institute of Forestry and Conservation at the University of Toronto. Our research explores the impacts of wildfire, insect disturbance and land-use on Canadian forest ecosystems in the current era of global change. We investigate these important problems through the application of a range of novel, quantitative, and data driven tools and methods.

Our goal is to conduct research that has practical impacts for understanding the links between forest patterns and processes to better forecast the consequences of land-use and global change on forest health. We collaborate with government agencies, private stakeholders, and communities to generate new knowledge and meaningful impacts necessary for conserving forest ecosystem structure and function.