Kerstin Niedermaier
Kerstin grew up on the verdant shores of Lake Erie in Cleveland, Ohio with a love for the outdoors and biology in general, leading to a degree in biology from UVA. Upon graduation, she joined AmeriCorps as a natural resource management technician in the Virginia State Parks, where she removed countless invasive species and was legally allowed to set fires in the woods. In 2020, she began her master's degree in biology, focusing on Carbon sequestration in disturbed forests with the Gough Lab at Virginia Commonwealth University, igniting her passion for on-the-ground research and the applications of climate science. Days after defending her thesis in 2022, she left for Switzerland, where she worked with two different groups at the Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research and ETH Zurich to measure biodiversity using novel tools and technologies. Following a brief hiatus in which she collected 21 Junior Ranger Badges across US National Parks, hiked the O-Circuit in Patagonia, and met Darwin's finches in the Galapagos, she returned stateside to eagerly begin working with the Southwest CASC to support climate adaptation research in the southwest. In her free time she enjoys consuming all media concerning modern day cults, biking, playing board games, and creating miniature objects.
Degree(s)
- BA, Anthropology & BA, Biology - The University of Virginia
- MS, Biology - Virginia Commonwealth University