Funding

Funding successes include...

Annual honesty (a.k.a. money plant)

Annual honesty, a.k.a. "moneyplant", Lunaria annua. CC-BY-SA Jacob Malcom 2019. https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/24594344

Center for Conservation Innovation funding (with Philanthropy)

>$250,000 from foundations and major donors, 2018-2021


Predicting Landscapes to Advance Conservation Effectiveness

$96,200, National Geographic Society, 2021

$15,000, Microsoft AI for Good, 2019


Dynamic, web-based ESA recovery plans

$50,000, DoD Legacy Award, 2017


Habitat data from text for refined range maps

$3,000, Google Geo4Good, 2016


Natural Language Processing of ESA documents

$20,000, Microsoft Research, 2016


Natural Language Processing of ESA documents

$9,500, NSF XSEDE, 2015


Molecular, ecological, and evolutionary biology of indirect genetic effects

$7,500, NSF XSEDE, 2014


Population size and the genetics of monopolization

$8,000, University of Texas Graduate Research Grant, 2013


The genetic basis of variation in ecosystem function

$36,000, University of Texas President Powers Fellow, 2011


Systems genetics of ecologically-important traits in a model ecological species (with PI Leibold)

$6,000, University of Texas Graduate Research Grant, 2010


How to deal with a predator: The ecological genomics of predator-

prey interactions

$2,000, University of Texas Graduate Research Startup Grant, 2009


Portal, Arizona (Morgan) wetland and upland restoration project

$3,800, Partners for Fish and Wildlife, 2007


Effects of riparian restoration on bird communities

$18,000, Arizona Game and Fish, 2005


Douglas High School wetland restoration project

$9,800, Partners for Fish and Wildlife, 2004


Wetland expansion and restoration for the Chiricahua leopard frog

$4,500, Partners for Fish and Wildlife, 2003


Restoration of an isolated desert wetland, Willow Tank

$8,000, Partners for Fish and Wildlife, 2002