President

Katie (she/her/they/them) is an associate professor and graduate program director for the Department of Journalism and Media Communication at Colorado State University. As an affiliate with the university’s Center for Science Communication, she is a recognized expert in social marketing-based approaches to environmental and health behavior change, particularly for animal-related ‘One Health’ issues. She has led social marketing research projects funded by the U.S. National Park Service, U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. View her projects at envsocialmarketing.com.

Fun Fact:  Outside of work, Katie is a budding “Disney Adult” likely planning a visit to a Disney park, listening to a design or psychology podcast, or eternally wishing for or enjoying Colorado summer and all it has to offer outdoors.

Vice President & Interim Treasurer

Taylor (she/her/hers) is an assistant professor of agricultural science and natural resources communication at Oregon State University. She has an interdisciplinary background in Natural Resources (wildlife conservation and management; BS), Agricultural Education (MS), and Communication (PhD) that informs her research and teaching. Her research explores perceptions and predictors of intention (ex. attitudes, social norms, risk perceptions, efficacy beliefs) and the development and testing of messages to motivate focal behaviors related to human dimensions of wildlife and other agricultural and natural resources topics. As a part of her scholarly identity, Taylor is committed to engaging with stakeholder groups, interdisciplinary scholars, practitioners, and other diverse audiences to develop and disseminate messages with practical impact.

Fun Fact: Though originally from Arizona, Taylor has embraced the clouds and rain since moving to Oregon, and now calls this her favorite kind of weather.

Secretary

Andrea is a lecturer at Princeton University. Her research occurs in the spaces where humans and non-human primates interact. This includes applying wild field research to captive animals, investigating the impacts of anthropogenic changes to wild primates, and examining how social media can be inadvertently harmful to wildlife. Andrea earned a PhD in Biological Anthropology from Boston University in 2019. Her doctoral research explored the nutrient drivers of orangutan foraging and has informed the diets of orangutans at orangutan rescue and rehabilitation centers and zoos. She has continued to study the diet and health of wild primates both as a post-doctoral researcher with Dr. Erin Vogel, and through starting a nutritional ecology program at the Tsaobis Baboon Project in Tsaobis, Namibia. Andrea became interested in how social media and images impact wildlife conservation in 2016, and started a research program with co-PI Cassie Freund investigating this in 2020.  Her work in this field led her to becoming an active member of the IUCN’s Primate SSG Subcommittee on Human-Primate Interactions. 

Fun Fact:  Outside of research and teaching, Andrea loves horror as a genre that engages important social constructs, her Italian greyhounds, and all things dessert.

Communications Officer

Lucy (she/her) is a Ph.D. candidate at Colorado State University. Using the conservation marketing framework she aims to mitigate negative human-wildlife interactions within recreation spaces. She discovered science communication while studying for wildlife biology exams during undergrad, where she enjoyed connecting friends to the content of her classes. Following graduation, she held positions with San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance and California State Parks, where she obtained an interpretive guide certification using narrative to connect members of the public to conservation efforts. Enamored with connecting and communicating for the benefit of conservation work, Lucy pursued an M.S. in Tropical Conservation Biology and Environmental Science at the University of Hawaiʻi at Hilo, where her graduate work focused on place-based science communication methods in Hawaiʻi.

Fun Fact:  When Lucy is not being a busy worker bee, she can be found with her nose stuck in a good fiction book, hiking trails to spot wildlife or spending quality time with friends and family.

Student Affairs Officer

Micaiala Hamner is a science communication researcher, with a passion for shark conservation and environmental communication. Micaiala is a current Doctor of Philosophy student, who specializes in qualitative and quantitative science communication research. Micaiala holds a M.A. degree in Strategic Communication and Leadership and a B.A. in Communication and Marine Biology from the University of West Florida. Micaiala has a passion for creating educational materials and developing innovative strategies to help combat the world’s growing environmental crisis. More specifically, Micaiala enjoys conducting research that analyzes environmental communication messages and the integration of narrative storytelling approaches to find innovative conservation solutions. Her passion for science communication arose from watching her favorite show The Crocodile Hunter Diaries. Her exposure to the show led her to pursue several opportunities to learn about conservation and cultivate her love for science communication, these experiences led her to volunteer at The Cincinnati Museum Center as an exhibit interpreter for the Museum of Natural History and Science, she later attended Jimmy Buffets Sea Camp, and later became a certified scuba diver. She is now an active member of Black in Marine Science and Black Women in Ecology Evolution and Marine Science. Each of these experiences have furthered her passion for science communication and the growing efforts to foster more collaborative science spaces.

Fun Fact:  Micaiala loves to travel and while traveling, she enjoys exploring local zoos and aquariums in the new places she visits.