Linda Ann Deegan is an estuarine and arctic ecologist with expertise in freshwater inputs, food web interactions, eutrophication, estuaries, and coastal processes. Her research combines ecosystem perspectives, energy flows, and community dynamics to tackle issues such as the effects of habitat degradation on fish communities, the importance of fish in exporting nutrients and carbon in estuaries, and the response of upper trophic levels to increased nutrient trends in arctic landscapes.[1] Deegan is the co-editor-in-chief of Estuaries and Coasts.
Deegan began her career in 1985 as an assistant professor at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and became an adjunct professor in 1989 in the Department of Environmental Conservation. In 1989, she joined the Ecosystem Center at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, where she was promoted to senior scientist in 2016. Starting in 2004 she was a professor in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and the Department of Geology at Brown University. As of 2009 Deegan has served as the director of the Comparative Analysis of Marine Ecosystem Organization (CAMEO), a joint NSF and NOAA program. In 2016, Deegan joined the Woodwell Climate Research Center.[5][3]
Deegan is known for her work on the effects of nutrient enrichment on salt marsh ecosystems, the impact of climate change on Arctic tundra ecosystems, and the role of wetlands in regulating carbon and nitrogen cycling. Deegan's work at Toolik Lake in Alaska has examined the impact of droughts on fish,[7] the impact of increasing water temperature on Arctic grayling fish,[8][9] and thermokarst terrains, which are regions where permafrost has collapsed due to melting.[10]
Deegan has served as project director of the TIDE project since 1996.[2] The project is the only coastal ecosystem-scale nutrient addition experiment in the world, as it adds chemical fertilizers to regions of the marsh in order to examine the impact on the ecosystem.[11][12] Deegan's work has shown that excessive nutrient levels cause changes in the fish and grasses.[13][14] In 2012, Deegan led the publication in Nature documenting the changes in the estuary that resulted from the addition of nutrients.[15][16]
^ abGoldstein, Meredith (22 May 2003). "Salt marshes studied: Purchase of farm allows Woods Hole project to expand". Boston Globe; Boston, Mass. p. 1 – via Proquest.
^Deegan, L. (2000). Linda A. Deegan - Sab.noaa.gov. Resume . Retrieved March 21, 2023, from https://sab.noaa.gov/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/Deegan-CV-Oct-2013.pdf.
^Horton, Tom; Dewar, Heather (26 September 2000). "Sea grasses vanish, marine life in peril Scientists see it the world over: Where excess nutrients wash into coastal waters, the undersea landscape changes drastically and marine nurseries are destroyed". The Sun; Baltimore, Md. pp. 1A – via ProQuest.
^Daley, Beth (18 October 2012). "A delicate balance in Plum Island marsh: Fertilizer, sewage damage critical ecosystem, study finds". Boston Globe; Boston, Mass. pp. B.1 – via ProQuest.