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Emma J Rosi

University Of Notre Dame

$3,888,776
Attributed
$15,453,117
Total exposure
14
Grants
6
Lead (contact PI)

Attributed= this PI's even-split share of every grant they're on (the fair, additive number). Exposure = full size of all those grants.

Funding over time

peak $7.4M · FY200519
$10M$7.5M$5M$2.5M$0
'05
'06
'07
'08
'09
'10
'11
'12
'13
'14
'15
'16
'17
'18
'19

Funding mix

By agency

NSF$15,453,117 · 14

By mechanism

$15,453,117 · 14

Grant awards (14)

LTREB: Streams to Screens: Bringing the Hubbard Brook Watershed Ecosystem Record (HB-WatER) into the 21st Century$704,486
· FY2019 · BIO · contact PI
LTER: Baltimore Ecosystem Study: Synthesis of long-term studies of how multiple human and biophysical factors interact to drive ecological change of an urban ecosystem$2,263,958
· FY2018 · BIO · contact PI
LTER: Dynamic heterogeneity: Investigating causes and consequences of ecological change in the Baltimore urban ecosystem$2,312,110
· FY2017 · BIO · contact PI
LTREB Renewal: Long-Term Effects of a Species Invasion on an Aquatic Ecosystem$450,000
· FY2016 · BIO
Coastal SEES Collaborative Research: Effects of restoration and redevelopment on nitrogen dynamics in an urban coastal watershed$529,378
· FY2014 · GEO
Collaborative Research: Wildlife subsidies interact with discharge to influence ecosystem function of a large African river$390,873
· FY2014 · BIO · contact PI
LTREB Renewal at Hubbard Brook: Hydrologic-nutrient cycle interaction in small, undisturbed and human-manipulated ecosystems$520,660
· FY2013 · BIO
Baltimore Ecosystem Study Phase III: Adaptive Processes in the Baltimore Socio-Ecological System from the Sanitary to the Sustainable City$6,174,561
· FY2011 · BIO
REU Site: Translational Ecology for Undergraduates$606,643
· FY2011 · BIO
LTREB: Long-term effects of a species invasion on an aquatic ecosystem$450,000
· FY2011 · BIO
Trophic regulation and support of mosquitoes: An ecosystem approach to pest emergence along an urban gradient$150,000
· FY2011 · BIO
COLLABORATIVE RESEARCH: Using empirical and modeling approaches to quantify the importance of nutrient spiraling in rivers$158,374
· FY2009 · BIO · contact PI
COLLABORATIVE RESEARCH: Using empirical and modeling approaches to quantify the importance of nutrient spiraling in rivers$150,874
· FY2009 · BIO · contact PI
Cycling of Novel Allochthonous Carbon in Midwestern Agricultural Streams$591,200
· FY2005 · BIO