Daniel
W. Schneider
Professor of Urban and Regional Planning
PhD, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1990
Dr. Schneider is an ecologist whose research focuses on the
effects of disturbances on aquatic ecosystems. By applying knowledge
of how natural perturbations affect ecosystems he seeks to predict
the effects of human disturbances.
His research extends from work
on the zebra mussel and its effects on the Great Lakes and
Mississippi River ecosystems, to the effects
of changes in flood regime on riverine wetlands, to historic
effects of settlement and changing land use on the ecology
of the Chesapeake Bay region.Dr. Schneider has also worked on
aquatic
ecology and water resources issues in Costa Rica, Nicaragua,
and Mexico.
His teaching covers ecological applications to planning,
watershed planning, and the historical ecology of human settlement.
He
also has an appointment in the Section for Aquatic Ecology
and Conservation at the Illinois
Natural History Survey.
Contact Information
Room M220, Temple Buell Hall
611 Lorado Taft Drive
Champaign, IL 61820
Phone: 217.244.7681
Fax: 217.244.1717
E-mail: ddws@illinois.edu
Current Research Areas
- Ecology and restoration of floodplain rivers
- Science and citizen participation in environmental planning
- Environmental history of Illinois River
- Ecology and management of invasive species
- Wetland ecology
- Environmental planning in Mexico
Selected Publications
Schneider, D.W., J.A. Stoeckel, C.R. Rehmann, K. D. Blodgett,
R. E. Sparks, D. K. Padilla. 2003. A developmental
bottleneck in dispersing larvae: implications for spatial population
dynamics. Ecology Letters 6:352-360.
Rehmann, C.R., J.A. Stoeckel, and D.W. Schneider. 2003. Effect
of turbulence on the mortality of zebra mussel veligers. Canadian Journal
of Zoology 81:1063-1069.
Henne, L.J., D.W. Schneider, and L.M. Martinez. 2002. Rapid Assessment
of Organic Pollution in a West-central Mexican River Using a Family-level Biotic
Index. Environmental Planning and Management 45:613-632.
Schneider, D.W. 2000. Local Knowledge, Environmental Politics and
the Founding of Ecology in the United States: Stephen Forbes and ?The Lake
as a Microcosm' (1887). Isis 91: 681-705.
Schneider, D.W. 1999. Snow-melt ponds in Wisconsin. Influence
of hydroperiod on invertebrate community structure. In: D. Batzer,
R. Rader and S. Wissinger (eds). Invertebrates in freshwater
wetlands of North America: Ecology and management. J. Wiley.
In press.
Schneider, D.W., C.D. Ellis and K.S. Cummings. 1998. A transportation
model assessment of the risk to native mussel communities from
zebra mussel spread. Conservation Biology 12:788-800.
Stoeckel, J.A., D.W. Schneider, L.A. Soeken, K.D. Blodgett and
R.E. Sparks. 1997. Propagule dynamics of a riverine metapopulation:
Implications for zebra mussel recruitment, dispersal and control
in a large-river system. Journal of the North American Benthological
Society 16:586-601.
Schneider, D.W. 1996. Effects of European settlement and land
use on patterns of similarity of Chesapeake forests. Bulletin
of the Torrey Botanical Club 123:223-239.
Schneider, D.W. 1996. Enclosing the floodplain: Resource conflict
on the Illinois River, 1880-1920. Environmental History 1(2):70-96.
Schneider, D.W. and T.M. Frost. 1996. Habitat duration and community
structure in temporary ponds. Journal of the North American
Benthological Society 15:64-86.
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