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This profile was automatically generated using 33 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 33 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
Employment History
View...View all 33 references Web References
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1. CHARLOTTE HARBOR NATIONAL ESTUARY PROGRAM
www.chnep.org/NEP/NEPstaff.htm - [Cached]Published on: 6/7/2008 Last Visited: 6/7/2008
Jaime Greenawalt Boswell joined the Charlotte Harbor National Estuary Program on a part-time basis in April 2006 to provide additional support to the Technical Advisory Committee.She was brought on as a full-time Environmental Scientist in August.Jaime graduated in 1999 with a B.S. in marine biology and a minor in chemistry from Millersville University in Pennsylvania.She received her master's degree in fisheries and aquatic sciences from the University of Florida in 2002.She has been an active member of the Charlotte Harbor scientific community since 2003 when she began her career with the Sanibel-Captiva Conservation Foundation marine laboratory as a benthic ecologist and GIS specialist.Her research has focused on fisheries population dynamics, fisheries habitat and seagrass ecology.Together with scientists from the Mote Marine Laboratory and Fish and Wildlife Research Institute, Jaime has played a key role in the study of bay scallop population dynamics and restoration in Pine Island Sound.She has also cooperated with scientists and managers from the Florida Department of Environmental Protection and Charlotte Harbor Environmental Center to assess seagrass species composition and abundance in relation to water quality in the greater Charlotte Harbor region. -
2. www.mote.org
www.mote.org/index.php?src=dir - [Cached]Published on: 3/15/2008 Last Visited: 6/5/2008
The causeway changed water circulation and scallop populations dropped around the same time, said Jaime Greenawalt, a research associate with the Sanibel-Captiva Conservation Foundation.
"At times, the South Florida Water Management District opens dam locks and releases fresh water from Lake Okeechobee into the Caloosahatchee River," she said.
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"It's been so long since there has been a recreational fishery," Greenawalt said. -
3. SWFRPC
www.swfrpc.org/staff.shtml - [Cached]Published on: 8/10/2007 Last Visited: 8/10/2007
Jaime Greenawalt Boswell, Environmental Scientist
jboswell@swfrpc.org
ext 230

