American Forest Foundation
Workshop Speaker, Panelist, & Facilitator Bios

Robert Bonnie
Vice President for Land Conservation and Wildlife, Environmental Defense Fund

Robert Bonnie is Vice-President for Land Conservation and Wildlife at Environmental Defense Fund where he focuses on the development and expansion of government and market-based incentives for land stewardship. At EDF, Bonnie helped establish and has managed EDF’s Center for Conservation Incentives. He has been extensively involved in the development of Safe Harbor and other incentive programs under the Endangered Species Act. Bonnie has extensive experience in reform and implementation of Farm Bill programs. He is a leading expert on the use of markets as a means to reward stewardship on farms, ranches and forest lands, including carbon crediting and conservation banking for endangered species. Bonnie joined Environmental Defense in 1995 with a bachelor’s degree from Harvard and masters in resource economics and forestry from Duke University’s Nicholas School of the Environment. Bonnie grew up in Kentucky and now lives in Virginia.

Frank Casey, Ph.D.
Director, Conservation Economics Program, Defenders of Wildlife

Dr. Frank Casey is an agricultural and natural resources economist who directs the Conservation Economics Program at Defenders of Wildlife. Dr. Casey’s areas of expertise include financial and institutional incentive mechanisms, developing economic policy alternatives for habitat conservation by private landowners, including ecosystem service payments and markets, the economics of wildlife habitat and biodiversity conservation, soil fertility, and water allocation, the economics of regulation and technology adoption, and natural resource conflict resolution. Dr. Casey has worked extensively with Defenders field offices on approaches to quantify the economic value of natural resources, determining the financial mechanisms to pay for the conservation of those resources, and translating these findings into public policy proposals. He also serves on numerous conservation policy advisory committees including the Minnesota Land Steward Project, the Winrock National Program in Performance-based Environmental Policies for Agriculture, the Bay Bank Advisory Committee, the Wisconsin Healthy Grown Initiative, and on the National Standards Committee for developing a national standard for sustainable agriculture. Dr. Casey also serves on the Board of Directors for the National Campaign for Sustainable Agriculture.

Dr. Casey has a Ph.D. in Food and Resource Economics from the University of Florida, an M.S. degree in Agricultural Economics from Cornell University, a Masters of Professional Studies in International Agriculture from Cornell University, and a B.S. in Political Science-International Relations from the California State University at Northridge.

Bobby Cochran, Ph.D.
Environmental Marketplace Analyst, Clean Water Services

Dr. Bobby Cochran joined Clean Water Services to assist in developing markets for ecosystem services. Clean Water Services is a water resource management utility for more than 520,000 people in urban Washington County, Oregon. Clean Water Services provides advanced wastewater treatment, stormwater management, river flow management and lead regional water supply planning. Dr. Cochran specializes in developing collaborative policy tools and approaches at the intersection between economics, technology, and the environment. Dr. Cochran received a Ph.D./M.A. in Urban Studies/Conflict Resolution from Portland State University, and his M.P.P. from the University of Southern California.

Paul M. Friday
Marine Corps Installations East (MCIEAST) Community Plans and Liaison Coordinator

In April, 2006, Paul M. Friday became the Marine Corps Installations East's (MCIEAST) first Community Plans and Liaison Coordinator. His coverage area extends from Quantico, Virginia to Blount Island, Florida. His duties include creating stronger ties among states with their military neighbors, understanding and tracking significant legislation of interest to the military, monitoring incompatible development in the white space between military installations, ranges and training areas, addressing ecosystem services opportunities and challenges, helping to resolve external quality of life issues, and helping regional and state entities properly plan for the mutual benefit of all. He routinely interfaces across all services and with individual installation personnel to better understand their issues and works with federal, state and regional officials to help resolve conflicts and/or challenges. He serves on the Southeast Regional Partnership for Planning and Sustainability (SERPPAS) Steering Committee and co-chairs the effort for the NC specific SERPPAS project...Sustainable Economic Corridors for Compatible Use of Resources and the Environment (SECCURE).

Friday has been active with and has served on a variety of federal, state, regional, and local trade and policy groups and with numerous local Chamber and Military Affairs Councils. He continues to work at the regional and State levels to assist in strengthening our military in conjunction with growing this Nation's economy.

Among other past experiences, Friday worked for more than a decade for an independent, not-for-profit entity charged with understanding our country's military technology and process needs and determining which best practices and technologies to transition to meet those ever changing requirements. He also spent 16 years working at Headquarters for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) assisting in addressing policy, financial, legislative matters.

Todd Gartner
Manager, Conservation Incentives, American Forest Foundation

Todd Gartner is the Conservation Incentives Manager for the American Forest Foundation's Center for Conservation Solutions. Gartner is a Master of Forestry graduate from the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies. He is also a Doris Duke Conservation Fellow, Switzer Environmental Fellow, and Property and Environmental Resources Center “Enviropreneur” with a strong background in economics, wildlife, and forestry. He focuses on place-based conservation incentives and market-based strategies, such as biodiversity offsets, payments for watershed services, and carbon markets, to achieve conservation objectives on family forestlands. Gartner’s previous work included researching the effects of fire on small mammal communities in Botswana, studying the impact of eco-tourism in Botswana and India, business consulting for the USDA Forest Service and several years as a corporate financial consultant. Gartner received his B.S. in finance from the University of Maryland’s Smith School of Business.

Katherine Hamilton
Associate Director, Ecosystem Marketplace

Katherine Hamilton is the Associate Director of the Ecosystem Marketplace. At the Ecosystem Marketplace, she's authored numerous pieces on carbon and water markets, as well as co-authored the book Voluntary Carbon Markets and the first and second annual "State of the Voluntary Carbon Markets" report.

Hamilton has also co-authored chapters and articles in publications by organizations such as Brookings Institution, the American Bar Association, and Middlesex University. Before joining the Ecosystem Marketplace, Hamilton held positions at the Yale Environmental Law and Policy Center; the United Nations Development Program as a Hixon Center for Urban Ecology Fellow; Natural Capitalism Inc; and the International Council for Science as its Program Coordinator for U.N. World Summit for Sustainable Development preparations. Hamilton holds a Master of Environmental Management degree from Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, where she wrote her thesis on the voluntary carbon markets, and bachelor's degree from the University of Michigan.

Steve Koehn
Director and State Forester, Maryland Department of Natural Resources

Steve Koehn is a seasoned and highly skilled licensed forester with 24 years of experience in forest resource management including the administration of a state forestry agency as Director for seven years. His responsibility includes statewide delivery of all technical and financial forestry assistance on both public and private lands. His office is responsible for the management of the 200,000 acre State Forest system, including the 60,000 acre Chesapeake Forest, a unique public and private partnership and the first Sustainable Forestry Initiative - Forest Stewardship Council dual certified forest in Maryland. Koehn currently serves as the Treasurer of NASF and is the past President of the Northeastern Area Association of State Foresters (NAASF), coordinating input on national forest policy issues such as the 2007 Farm Bill, National Forest Sustainability Policy and USFS State and Private Forestry Redesign. He has also held leadership positions in the Chesapeake Bay Program Forestry Workgroup, Society of American Foresters, Maryland Association of Forest Conservancy District Boards, and Maryland Forests Association. In addition to working for Maryland Department of Natural Resources, Koehn has also taught forestry courses at Johns Hopkins School of Professional Studies in Business Education.

Koehn received his B.S. in Forest Science from Pennsylvania State University. He also currently sits on AFF’s Center for Conservation Solutions Operating Committee.

Radha Kuppalli
Director, New Forests Inc.
Radha Kuppalli leads New Forests’ U.S. business and is focused on developing the ecological products investment program and supporting forestry investment globally. Before taking on the role of Director, Kuppalli was based in Sydney as Manager of Business Development. Kuppalli was previously an Analyst at Natsource LLC for two years. At Natsource she advised clients on a range of issues related to greenhouse gas emissions markets and renewable energy credit markets and developed extensive experience in environmental markets-related investments. Kuppalli has Bachelor of Arts Degrees in International Studies and Economic Theory from American University in Washington, D.C., and Masters Degrees in Business Administration and Environmental Management from Yale University's School of Management and School of Forestry and Environmental Studies. Kuppalli is based in New Forests’ Washington, DC office.

Elizabeth Larry
Ecosystem Services Specialist, USDA Forest Service

Elizabeth Larry is an ecosystem services specialist for the U.S. Forest Service, where she helps shape and coordinate agency efforts to advance markets and payments for ecosystem services. Much of her work focuses on communicating and sharing an ecosystem services perspective with Forest Service employees, conservation partners, Congress, and the public. She also periodically serves as speechwriter for the Forest Service Chief and the Associate Chief. Larry began working for the agency in 2004 as a Presidential Management Fellow. She received her Master of Forestry degree from Yale University and a B.A. from Bowdoin College. She is an appointed member of the Society of American Foresters World Forestry Committee.

Roel R. Lopez, Ph. D.
Special Assistant for Range Sustainment and Regional Partnerships in the Office of the Deputy

Under Secretary of Defense, Environmental Readiness, and Safety, Department of Defense Dr. Roel R. Lopez is an Associate Professor in the Department of Wildlife and Fisheries Sciences and Texas A&M Institute of Renewable Natural Resources. Dr. Lopez is on special assignment (2-year IPA) serving as a Special Assistant for Range Sustainment and Regional Partnerships in the Office of the Deputy Under Secretary of Defense (Installations and Environment), Environmental Readiness, and Safety in Arlington, Virginia. He will support the Under Secretary of Defense (Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics) by ensuring the long-term sustainment of military test and training ranges while providing sound land stewardship. His previous research focused on endangered and/or fragmented wildlife populations and nuisance populations in urban settings. Dr. Lopez is active in The Wildlife Society (Certified Wildlife Biologist) from the local to national level, and currently serves as Associate Editor for the Wildlife Society Bulletin and Journal of Wildlife Management. Dr. Lopez holds a Ph.D. and M.S. in Wildlife and Fisheries Sciences from Texas A&M University and a B.S. in Forestry from Stephen F. Austin State University.

Carl F. Lucero
National Leader for Clean Water, USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service

Carl Lucero is the National Leader for Clean Water at the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service where he guides the agency on water quality issues. He also leads the USDA effort on Market Based Conservation where he developed the USDA Policy on Market Based Approaches and drafted a new element on Market Based Conservation for the 2008 Farm Bill. He is currently going through the Senior Executive Service Candidate Program and he just completed a 4 month detail to Forest Trends where he provided guidance and direction in the development of water quality markets.

Lucero is a 27 year professional of the NRCS. He served his first 13 years in New Mexico working as a Project Engineer, Design Engineer and as the State Water Quality Specialist. During that time Lucero also served a year on detail with the Army Corps of Engineers providing irrigation design assistance. In the late 90’s Lucero moved to Colorado where he accepted a 5 year assignment with the EPA as the NRCS Liaison developing partnerships, promoting the watershed approach and working on various activities related to the Clean Water Action Plan. In 2001, Lucero returned to NRCS in the Animal Husbandry and Clean Water Division of National Headquarters in Washington, DC where he continues his partnership work with EPA and other Federal partners on water quality policy issues such as Source Water Protection, Hypoxia in the
Gulf of Mexico, Total Maximum Daily Loads, Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations, and Water Quality Credit Trading. He has also developed and is implementing Environmental Credit Trading Partnership agreements with the EPA and the Fish and Wildlife Service. Lucero grew up in Santa Fe, New Mexico and graduated from the University of New Mexico with a bachelor’s degree in Civil Engineering. He is currently working on a Masters degree in Public Administration through American University.

Becca Madsen
Biodiversity Program Manager, Ecosystem Marketplace

Becca Madsen is the Biodiversity Program Manager at Ecosystem Marketplace. Prior to joining Ecosystem Marketplace, she was a Presidential Management Fellow with the US Forest Service. During her fellowship, Madsen gained expertise in environmental markets by informing mitigation banking business proposals while on loan to Environmental Banc & Exchange, serving as a pivotal team member in the Bay Bank project, and analyzing demand for water quality trading. Madsen completed a Master of Environmental Management from Duke University, where she was selected as a Doris Duke Conservation Fellow. Before attending graduate school, she served as a small business volunteer with the Peace Corps in Mali and worked on water quality and land conservation issues in city government in Texas.

Deborah L. Mead
National Conservation Banking Coordinator, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

Deborah (Deblyn) Mead is a biologist with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service), Endangered Species Program. She has held various positions within the Service during the last 13 years, including 8 years in the Sacramento Field Office where she was instrumental in the development of their very successful conservation banking program. The last 5 years she has been in the headquarters office, working on various threatened and endangered species regulatory issues.

Prior to joining the Fish and Wildlife Service, Mead worked for the U. S. Geological Survey for 3 years on a reconnaissance investigation of water quality in the Klamath Basin, California and Oregon. She also spent 2 years as a biological consultant with a private firm in California, working primarily on power projects. Entomology is her biological area of expertise and she has taught several community college courses in entomology and general biology. Mead holds a bachelor’s degree in zoology from the University of California at Davis and a master’s degree in ecology and systematic biology from San Francisco State University.

Joy E. Nicholopoulos, Ph.D.
Texas State Administrator for Ecological Services, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Region 2

Dr. Joy E. Nicholopoulos began her Federal career with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) in 1992 in the Southwestern Regional Office in Albuquerque, New Mexico as a Co-op Student (now called the SCEP Program) with the Mexican Wolf Recovery Program. Upon completing her Ph.D. in biology at New Mexico State University in 1996, Dr. Nicholopoulos moved to Washington, DC and served in several positions before being selected as the Service’s National Listing Coordinator. She returned to the southwest as the New Mexico Field Supervisor; then served as the New Mexico State Administrator.

After spending 6 years in New Mexico, Dr. Nicholopoulos moved to Texas to become the Service’s Texas State Administrator. In Texas, Dr. Nicholopoulos supervises four Ecological Services Field Offices and the Texas Coastal Program. She has recently been selected to participate in the Department of the Interior’s Senior Executive Service Candidate Development Program.

In her spare time, Dr. Nicholopoulos is an avid reader and a casual bird watcher. She loves to travel with friends and family and enjoys spending time exploring the great outdoors in Texas.

Thomas W. O’Brien
Executive Director, Watershed Agricultural Council

Tom O’Brien serves as the Executive Director for the Watershed Agricultural Council, a private non-profit organization with an annual budget of $15 million, working on farms and forestland in the 2,000 square mile New York City water supply watershed to enhance the profitability of the working landscape and protect the drinking water of metropolitan New York City. The organization specializes in forest and farmland environmental assessment and construction of best management practices and the acquisition and monitoring of conservation easements. O’Brien has twenty-five years of experience within the field of natural resource conservation, restoration and management with an emphasis on non-point source pollution mitigation from agriculture and forestry on the watershed scale. He co-founded the Wachusett Watershed
Environmental Educator’s Network, and previously served as the Restoration Coordinator and Watershed Team Leader with the Massachusetts Executive Office of Environmental Affairs. O’Brien holds a B.S. in Landscape Architecture and Regional Planning from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst.

David Primozich
Executive Director, Willamette Partnership

Worldwide, there has been an explosion of growth in market mechanisms to pay for the things naturally functioning ecosystems do for society – such as trees taking in carbon dioxide and releasing oxygen and cooling stream water, or forests purifying our drinking water, and wetlands filtering and recharging our groundwater and floodplains reducing the impacts of flood events. Ecosystem service markets provide a pivotal link between people willing to pay for actions that improve and protect our environment and those who can take those actions. Oregon has nurtured creative thinking and environmental innovation and leadership for decades and is now poised to propel ecosystem service markets as a way to resolve some of our most challenging environmental problems while creating the economies that support the people doing it.

David Primozich serves as Executive Director of the Willamette Partnership - a coalition of stakeholder leaders working to increase the pace, scope, and effectiveness of conservation. The Partnership is currently developing the tools and policies needed to make ecosystem service markets work to achieve our ecological goals. Primozich has worked on natural resource policy and planning projects since 1998. Prior to helping form the Willamette Partnership, he led production of the Willamette Subbasin Plan – a comprehensive, peer reviewed strategy to guide fish and wildlife conservation funding and project development in the Willamette Basin.

James R. Remuzzi
Principle, Sustainable Solutions, LLC

James R. Remuzzi is the principle of Sustainable Solutions, LLC a natural resource consulting company based in Washington D.C. Sustainable Solutions provides a range of natural resource consulting and contracting services to private landowners, forestry associations, NGO’s, and State and Federal agencies. Client services include: forest and land management planning, ecosystem service project design and management, natural resource training and education, GIS and GPS mapping, prescribed fire planning and implementation, and natural resource inventory and monitoring.

Remuzzi has degrees in Forest Technology and Environmental Science from the University of New Hampshire. Prior to founding Sustainable Solutions, his experience was based largely in the private sector, where he worked for The Sampson Group as a member of the planning team for the Chesapeake Forests project, and for Vision Forestry LLC as a field forester on over 60,000 acres of forestland on Maryland and Virginia’s Eastern Shore. While on the Shore, Remuzzi was a member of the management team that underwent a successful dual SFI/FSC certification audit of 25,000 acres of the Chesapeake Forest project lands.

Hughes Simpson
Program Coordinator for Ecosystem Services, Texas Forest Service

Hughes Simpson is the Program Coordinator for Ecosystem Services with Texas Forest Service. In this role, Simpson is responsible for coordinating the agency’s carbon credit activities, as well as the development of other ecosystem service markets, including Water and Biodiversity. Hughes also serves in the same position for the agency’s Water Resources / Best Management Practices program.

Simpson earned a B.S. in Forest Resource Management from Clemson University. Ever since joining the agency in 2000, Simpson has been active in professional organizations. He has held offices in the Society of American Foresters and served on numerous committees of the Texas Forestry Association and Southern Group of State Foresters. In 2005, Simpson was elected to the Texas Forestry Association’s Board of Directors, received the Forestry Leadership Award from the Texas Society of American Foresters in 2006, and became a Certified Forester® in 2007.

Dan Spethmann, Ph.D.
Managing Partner, Working Lands Investment Partners, LLC

Dr. Dan Spethmann has more than 30 years of experience in natural resource management. Dr. Spethmann is currently a Managing Partner with Working Lands Investment Partners, LLC. Most recently, he was Manager of Investment Programs for New Forests, Inc. where he helped to raise and place institutional and private capital into ecosystem markets. Prior to this, he led the Non Timber Resources Development effort at Temple-Inland, Inc. where his team developed stream and wetlands mitigation instruments, working forest conservation easements, and endangered species credit programs. He was Founder and President of Strategic Controls Corporation which provided supervisory control and data acquisition systems for the natural gas industry. He also served as Project Manager at Moncon, Inc. where he provided controls systems for hydroelectric facilities as well as the municipal water and wastewater industries. He holds a PhD in Forest Economics from Stephen F. Austin State University, an MS in Forestry from the University of Wisconsin Madison, and a BS in Biology from the University of Wisconsin. He has been nominated to be an adjunct faculty member at Stephen F. Austin State University.

Eric Sprague
Program Director, Pinchot Institute for Conservation

Eric Sprague is helping the Pinchot Institute investigate opportunities for increasing sustainable
management on private forestlands. His current projects include developing the Bay Bank, an online ecosystem service marketplace for private landowners, and the sustainable forestry revolving loan fund, a low-interest loan fund that promotes sustainable management and lessens the need for family land to be sold to pay back short- to mid-term debts. Sprague received a Master of Science in Environmental Science and a Master of Public Affairs from Indiana University. Between 2000 and 2004, Sprague served as the natural resource and farmland protection expert for the U.S. EPA's smart growth program. From 2004 to 2006, Sprague managed The State of Chesapeake Forests project for The Conservation Fund. Synthesizing
more than a decade's worth of data, the resulting report presents a comprehensive picture of the status of forestland in the Chesapeake Bay watershed.

Tracy Stanton
Water Program Manager, Ecosystem Marketplace

Tracy Stanton is the Water Program Manager of the Ecosystem Marketplace. Her work focuses on
expanding the coverage of water issues. Recently, she worked as a consultant for the National Academy of Public Administration where she collaborated on an assessment of US EPA's delivery of environmental services using the Chesapeake Bay watershed as a learning platform. From 1995-2003, Stanton worked at the University of Maryland in the School of Public Policy and Center for International Economics developing programs aimed at improving the effectiveness of government policies and programs in the environment and financial management arenas. She holds a masters degree in Public and Environmental Policy from the University of Maryland and a BA from The Ohio State University.

Albert H. Todd
S&PF Assistant Director for Ecosystem Services and Markets, USDA Forest Service

Al Todd graduated from Penn State University with a B.S. in Environmental Resource Management and from the University of Arizona with an M.S. in Watershed Hydrology. Todd has worked for local government, the private sector, and for the last 29 years with the Forest Service. Todd began his Forest Service career in 1979 working as a Hydrologist on National Forests in Idaho and California and then served as the Watershed Staff Director for the Lake Tahoe Basin National Forest before coming to the Northeastern Area, State and Private Forestry in 1992. In NA, Todd served for 7 years as Liaison to the Chesapeake Bay Program in Annapolis, Maryland and 9 years as Watershed Program Leader -- managing a variety of watershed efforts across the 20 state Area. Since mid-August of 2008, Todd has been in Forest Service headquarters in Washington, DC in the new position of S&PF Assistant Director for Ecosystem
Services and Markets.

Todd has authored forest and watershed policies and written numerous technical papers related to watershed restoration, riparian buffers, and watershed management. Todd is a two-time winner of the Chief of the Forest Service's Stewardship Award and the 2007 Wagon Wheel Gap Hydrologist of the Year.

Todd has been blessed by four sons and a wonderful and patient wife of 28 years.

Sara Vickerman
Senior Director, Biodiversity Partnerships, Defenders of Wildlife

Sara Vickerman is senior director of biodiversity partnerships for Defenders of Wildlife and director of the Northwest office. Based in West Linn, Vickerman oversees a wide variety of biodiversity policy development projects, especially those that require finding common ground among diverse interests. She is the author of a report called Stewardship Incentives: Conservation Strategies for Oregon’s Working Landscape, published in 1998 as part of the Oregon Biodiversity Project and later revised for a national audience. She is co-author of a report called Incentives for Biodiversity Conservation: An Ecological and Economic Assessment, published in 2007. Vickerman has received several awards including the Distinguished Achievement Award from the Society for Conservation Biology, the National Award for Sustainability, and the Fernhopper Award from the College of Forestry at Oregon State University.

Her background includes an M.S. in biology, geography and education from Southern Oregon State College, a B.S. in anthropology from California State University at Fullerton, and an A.A. in art from Fullerton Junior College.

Laurence D. Wiseman
President and CEO, American Forest Foundation

In 1993, Larry Wiseman became the founding president and CEO of the American Forest Foundation. Wiseman developed the American Forest Foundation [AFF] to test two new organizational concepts – first, a 501(c)(3) non-profit where groups with radically different agendas could work together on specific, common objectives; and second, a low-risk setting where innovative programs could be tested, then extended. Today, AFF is recognized as a key player in forest conservation, wildlife and watershed protection, ecosystem service markets and environmental education. Its programs annually attract dozens of funders and partners – state and Federal agencies, foundations, businesses, other conservation and environmental groups. Since 1993, AFF’s programs, budgets and staff have grown more than five-fold.

Wiseman was educated at Dartmouth College, where he received an A.B. in Government with Highest Distinction. He received an M.A. in Public Affairs from the Woodrow Wilson School at Princeton University. He has served on many non-profit boards and government advisory bodies, including the External Advisory Board to Yale’s Global Institute for Sustainable Forestry, the Federally-appointed National Recovery Team for the Ivory-Billed Woodpecker, the National Urban and Community Forestry Advisory Committee, and others.

Earlier in his career, Wiseman was vice president of Yankelovich, Skelly and White, a national public opinion and public affairs consulting firm. He began working in 1971 as a television producer, reporter and writer for dozens of local programs and series and documentaries aired nationally on PBS and overseas. A native of Washington, D.C., Wiseman is married to Robin Jeweler, a senior attorney for the US Congress. They have twin sons.

David Wolfe
Ecologist, Land, Water & Wildlife Program, Environmental Defense Fund

David Wolfe oversees all aspects of Environmental Defense's Landowner Conservation Assistance and Safe Harbor programs in Texas. He and his staff use a variety of incentives to encourage and enlist private landowner participation in endangered species habitat restoration and recovery. Focal species include the Golden-cheeked Warbler, Black-capped Vireo, Houston toad, Lesser Prairie Chicken and ocelot. He holds B.S. and M.E. degrees in Agricultural Engineering from the University of Florida, and a M.S. degree in Ecology from the University of Georgia.

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