Tessa Francis, Ph.D.
About
Degrees
Introduction
Tessa Francis is the Lead Ecosystem Ecologist at the Puget Sound Institute, and the Managing Director of the Ocean Modeling Forum. Tessa holds a B.A. in Political Science from the University of California, Berkeley; a B.S. in Wildlife Science from the University of Washington; and a Ph.D. in Zoology and Urban Ecology from the University of Washington.
Scholarly Interests
Tessa is an aquatic ecologist, trained as a limnologist and working in marine systems for the last 10+ years. She is interested in the important associations between terrestrial and aquatic habitats, and how watershed and shoreline dynamics impact aquatic food webs and populations. Tessa's field work focuses on ecosystem-based management of Puget Sound fish, including forage fish and salmonids. At PSI, she leads boundary-spanning activities and projects to link best available science to ecosystem-based management of Puget Sound, including via modeling and synthesis projects. At the Ocean Modeling Forum, Tessa forms and leads multidisciplinary working groups to improve model-based advice for ocean management, using multi-model approaches. She is also the chair of the PSEMP Modeling Work Group.
Affiliations
- Editor, Encyclopedia of Puget Sound
- Northwest Straits Commission Science Advisory Board (former)
- Chair, Puget Sound Ecosystem Monitoring Program Modeling Working Group (former)
Magel C.L. and Francis T.B. 2022. Evaluating ecosystem-based management alternatives for the Puget Sound, U.S.A. social-ecological system using qualitative watershed models. Front. Mar. Sci. 9:1012019. doi: 10.3389/fmars.2022.1012019
James, C.A., Francis, T.B., Baker, J.E. Georgiadis, N., Kinney, A., Magel, C., Rice, J., Roberts, T. and Wright, C.W. 2022. A boundary spanning system supports large-scale ecosystem-based management. Environmental Science & Policy 133: 137-145. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsci.2022.03.014
Francis, T.B., Sullaway, G.H., Feist, B.E., Shelton, A.O., Chui, E., Daley, C., Frick, K.E., Tolimieri, N., Williams, G.D. and Samhouri, J.F. 2022. Equivocal associations between small-scale shoreline restoration and subtidal fishes in an urban estuary. Restor Ecol e13652. https://doi.org/10.1111/rec.13652