James Stegen
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, WA, United States
- This delegate is presenting an abstract at this event.
Dr. Stegen completed a PhD at the University of Arizona in 2009 in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, and spent two years as a U.S. National Science Foundation postdoctoral fellow before moving to Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) in 2011 as Linus Pauling postdoctoral fellow. At PNNL he has transitioned to a senior research scientist with an emphasis on river corridor science, and also holds a joint appointment with Washington State University. A hallmark of his work is the development of ICON-based science to generate outcomes that are transferable across systems and mutually beneficial across stakeholders through intentional Integration, Coordination, Openness, and Networking. He co-founded ICON Science Cooperative (https://icon-science.pnnl.gov) to facilitate use of these principles and co-founded the ICON-based Worldwide Hydrobiogeochemistry Observation Network for Dynamic River Systems (WHONDRS; https://whondrs.pnnl.gov). These efforts are leading to large-scale synthesis and democratized access to data, instrumentation, and collegial networks. In this context, he focuses on linking detailed molecular properties of the chemistry and biology of river corridors to major physical drivers and disturbances, such as the progressive loss of surface water. A unique aspect of his technical approach is merging concepts, theories, and tools across disciplines, such as the integration of meta-community ecology with organic matter molecular chemistry.
Presentations this author is a contributor to:
Inundation history controls sediment oxygen consumption more strongly than pyrogenic organic matter additions in parafluvial systems (134288)
2:45 PM
Vanessa Garayburu-Caruso
Special Session: Non-perennial freshwater ecosystems: Resilience in a drying world 4.0
Mapping Wetland Inundation Regimes using Google’s AlphaEarth Embeddings: A Case Study in the Florida Everglades (#222)
4:15 PM
Jenna Abrahamson
Poster Session & Taxonomic Fair (Coffee & Light Catering Provided)
Harnessing artificial intelligence to automate environmental predictions (135435)
2:15 PM
Avni Malhotra
Ecosystem Metabolism 2.0
Wildfire impacts on stream organic matter chemistry depend on hillslope-stream connectivity (134324)
2:00 PM
Allison Myers-Pigg
Special Session: The fire’s leading edge: Exploring the paradoxical effects of fire on freshwater ecosystems to support more resilient watersheds and communities 2.0
Towards transparent, robust use of LLMs in writing peer reviewed publications (135447)
3:15 PM
James Stegen
Special Session: Non-perennial freshwater ecosystems: Resilience in a drying world 4.0
Characterizing variable inundation in non-perennial streams with a terrestrial model and commercial satellite imagery (135519)
11:30 AM
Etienne Fluet-Chouinard
Ecosystem Metabolism 1.0
A Knowledge-Guided Machine Learning Approach for Inferring Metabolism Regimes in Streams and Rivers (135678)
3:15 PM
Peter Regier
Ecosystem Metabolism 2.0
Non-perennial flow enhances impacts of sediment texture on hydro-biogeochemical parameterization (136055)
3:00 PM
Yunxiang Chen
Special Session: Non-perennial freshwater ecosystems: Resilience in a drying world 4.0
SFS 2026