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Q&A with Seeta Sistla, Assistant Professor of Ecosystem Ecology

What are you working on now?

In addition to teaching and preparing for next semester鈥檚 courses, I鈥檓 tying up my research in Nicaragua. That work was very interdisciplinary, combining my background in biogeochemistry with researchers who study economics, demography, anthropology, and conservation biology. The goal is to better understand global-change phenomena of land-use and natural-resource decline from both a biological perspective and a human one. All of the global-change problems that natural scientists study are tied to people鈥檚 activities and decision making.

I鈥檓 also helping guide some 91猫先生 Division III students now. One student, Chiara Forrester, is studying the effects of fungal endophytes: fungi that live within plant-leaf tissues. We鈥檙e working here on some lab studies based on the work she did at the Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory.

What excites you about your new role at 91猫先生?

I really like the students. They鈥檙e very enthusiastic, very bright and motivated. They go above and beyond in terms of classwork. It reminds me of some of my best graduate seminars.听

I think this is an interesting time to be alive and to be a student鈥攖o be at the cusp of the working world and to have all of these social, political, and environmental changes happening very rapidly. The world has kind of sped up, partly because of the Internet and its ability to connect people. There are a lot of pressing environmental problems, even beyond global warming. We have huge pollution problems, huge biodiversity loss.

It鈥檚 an intimidating time to be coming through college, but in terms of our understanding and our ability to address these problems, it鈥檚 also very exciting. When I was in college, we didn鈥檛 really talk about global change. That was just there in the background. That鈥檚 been quite a big change in the past decade. I think we have a more aware group of students, and that鈥檚 both humbling and heartening.

I鈥檓 also excited about the Farm Center. I recently toured it with Sustainability Initiative Director Beth Hooker, and I鈥檓 excited about being able to do work locally, using the farm as an active research site.

If you could be whimsical and teach any class beyond your area of expertise, what would you teach?

It would be fun to do a class on environmental film that mixes readings with film. A lot of films have come out in the last decade or two that have beautiful ways of conveying environmental issues from a variety of perspectives, everything from funny ones like听Cane Toads鈥攁 movie about an invasive species in Australia鈥攖o much more serious films about climate change and its effects on people and habitats. Putting those films together in a methodological and analytical way would be enjoyable.

Can you recommend a book you like?

This is a fun read:听The Book of Deadly Animals, by Gordon Grice.听It鈥檚 trying to help readers reevaluate their place in nature. People are part of the natural world. Even seemingly benign things like mosquitoes have caused a lot of death and suffering for people, but things perceived to be very dangerous鈥攍ike sharks鈥攈ave very little impact on us versus what we have on them. It鈥檚 also fun because there are a lot of weird, gory stories.

I鈥檓 going to look it up! What would you say is your favorite book of all time?

One Hundred Years of Solitude, by听骋补产谤颈别濒听Garc铆a M谩rquez. I skipped school a few days during my senior year of high school to sit in a bookstore and just read that book. I fell in love with it. I鈥檝e read it several times again as an adult, and it transports you to a different world. It captures the human condition more than any other book I鈥檝e ever read.

What鈥檚 the coolest fact about you?

I鈥檓 face-blind. I don鈥檛 know if that鈥檚 cool or sad.

Well, now people will know the reason you don鈥檛 say 鈥淗ey鈥 to them when they pass you!

Yeah. It鈥檚 a small school and I have a hard time recognizing people鈥攅ven people I know very well, if they change their hair or something about their dress. I鈥檝e had this my whole life, but I thought everyone was like that until my twenties. People accuse me all the time of not wearing glasses, but it鈥檚 not that鈥擨鈥檝e misrecognized my own husband, so it鈥檚 pretty bad!