Early life and education
Ustin is fromResearch and career
Her work considers remote sensing of environmental and landscape properties, making use of hyperspectral analysis and thermal scanners. Remote sensing has since been used to monitor natural disasters, study climate changes and monitor air pollution. Over the course of her career, Ustin made use of remote sensing data from five different continents, including tracking the impacts of agriculture on forests and monitoring invasive plant species. Ustin held several positions at University of California, Davis, including serving as Director of both the Center for Spatial Technology and Remote Sensing and the John Muir Institute of the Environment. She worked with NASA to build space-based imaging spectrometers. In 2020 Ustin was elected to the Ecological Society of America. Her citation read,“Elected for research pioneering the use of remote sensing technology for detecting changes in plant community characteristics, biological diversity, and land use, and for her continued influence on the field,”.
Awards
* 2010 Honorary Doctorate from the University of Zurich * 2017 Elected Fellow of the American Geophysical Union * 2020 Elected Fellow of the Ecological Society of AmericaSelected publications
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Ustin, Susan Living people Year of birth missing (living people) American earth scientists University of California, Davis faculty Fellows of the American Geophysical Union Fellows of the Ecological Society of America California State University, East Bay alumni