Dr. Joshua J. Tewksbury
My career has been driven by a deep interest in the context of diversity and the importance
of this context for the creation of and maintenance of more sustainable relationships with the
non-human world. I am an ecologist, a natural historian, and a conservation biologist. For me,
all of these roles revolve around the study of context - the study of the physical and biological
environment that surrounds, and, quite literally, gets inside organisms, populations, and communities.
This context defines the contours of diversity, and I am convinced that this context is critical to
understanding the responses of populations and communities, and the resilience of biological diversity
in the face of change - human caused and otherwise. It follows that our ability to predict, minimize
and mitigate our impacts on the non-human world, and our ability to live sustainably within the
ecology of this planet, rests on two things: our understanding of the forces that shape and reshape
the organisms around us, and our understanding of the way these organisms shape and reshape our
societies. My work thus reflects a balance between basic ecological and evolutionary research
into the contexts that define, create and maintain life on this planet, and application of these
concepts and findings to the most pressing human-caused impacts on diversity.
For a one-page overview of current research going on in my lab, click
here .
For a detailed look at all of our current research projects, please click here link.
For detailed looks at Post-doc, graduate-student and undergrad-led research, please follow the people link,
and click on the pictures or names.
To see when I am available, check out Josh's calendar
Click for Tewksbury's CV
Contact information
tewksjj@u.washington.edu(email)
