Camille LaFosse Stagg, Ph.D.
Camille Stagg is a Research Ecologist at the Wetland and Aquatic Research Center in Lafayette, Louisiana.
Camille's research focuses on how ecosystem functions, such as elevation change, carbon cycling, and resilience, are affected by global stressors. Her goal is to understand how these processes respond to changing conditions, including rising sea levels, elevated atmospheric CO2, and land use change, to provide guidance for management and restoration of these dynamic ecosystems.
Education and Certifications
Ph.D., Oceanography and Coastal Sciences, Louisiana State University, 2009
M.S., Environmental Toxicology, Clemson University, 2004
B.S., Biology, Christian Brothers University, 2002
Science and Products
Monitoring and Adaptive Management Plan for Deepwater Horizon Natural Resource Damage Assessment (NRDA) Project: Large-scale Marsh Creation – Upper Barataria Component
Restoring Texas Coastal Wetlands: Decision Support for the Beneficial Use of Dredged Material
Developing a Decision Support Tool to Inform Louisiana’s Climate Change Adaptation Strategy
Wetland Carbon Working Group: Improving Methodologies and Estimates of Carbon and Greenhouse Gas Flux in Wetlands
Understanding Impacts of Sea-Level Rise and Land Management on Critical Coastal Marsh Habitat
The Response of Coastal Wetlands to Sea-level Rise: Understanding how Macroscale Drivers Influence Local Processes and Feedbacks
Impacts of coastal and watershed changes on upper estuaries: causes and implications of wetland ecosystem transitions along the US Atlantic and Gulf Coasts
Understanding Impacts of Sea-Level Rise and Land Management on Critical Coastal Marsh Habitat
Identification of Hydrologic Controls on Coastal Spartina patens Marshes and Optimal Hydrological Conditions for Sustainable Mottled Duck Habitat
RESTORE Science: Inventory of Gulf Ecosystem Indicators Using an Ecological Resilience Framework
Coastal wetland vegetation and elevation data characterizing a Sudden Vegetation Dieback event in San Bernard National Wildlife Refuge in 2019
Long-term soil carbon data and accretion from four marsh types in Mississippi River Delta in 2015
Field and simulated data to construct hypervolumes of coastal wetland plant states for resilience quantification, Louisiana, USA (2016-2017)
Short term soil carbon data and accretion rates from four marsh types in Mississippi River Delta collected in 2015
Modeling soil pore water salinity response to drought in tidal freshwater forested wetlands
Rapid peat development beneath maturing mangrove forests: quantifying ecosystem changes along a 25-year chronosequence of created coastal wetlands
Local and landscape-scale data describing patterns of coastal wetland loss in the Texas Chenier Plain, U.S.A.
Salt marsh phenology and sexual reproductive characteristics at reference and restored sites in Louisiana, USA (2016)
Salt marsh carbon dynamics under altered hydrologic regimes and elevated CO2 conditions, Louisiana, USA (2014-2015)
Early growth interactions between a mangrove and an herbaceous salt marsh species are not affected by elevated CO2 or drought, Louisiana saltmarsh, 2015
Primary production across a coastal wetland landscape in Louisiana, U.S.A. (2012-2014)
Organic matter decomposition across a coastal wetland landscape in Louisiana, U.S.A. (2014-2015)
A model of the spatiotemporal dynamics of soil carbon following coastal wetland loss applied to a Louisiana salt marsh in the Mississippi River Deltaic Plain
Modeling impacts of drought-induced salinity intrusion on carbon dynamics in tidal freshwater forested wetlands
Presence of the herbaceous marsh species Schoenoplectus americanus enhances surface elevation gain in transitional coastal wetland communities exposed to elevated CO2 and sediment deposition events
Potential for carbon and nitrogen sequestration by restoring tidal connectivity and enhancing soil surface elevations in denuded and degraded south Florida mangrove ecosystems
Preface to book: Wetland carbon and environmental management
Summary of wetland carbon and environmental management: Path forward
Carbon fluxes and potential soil accumulation within Greater Everglades cypress and pine forested wetlands
Modeling the impacts of hydrology and management on carbon balance at the Great Dismal Swamp, Virginia and North Carolina, USA
Carbon flux, storage, and wildlife co-benefits in a restoring estuary
The importance of wetland carbon dynamics to society: Insight from the Second State of the Carbon Cycle Science Report
Ecosystem service co-benefits provided through wetland carbon management
Tradeoffs in habitat value to maximize natural resource benefits from coastal restoration in a rapidly eroding wetland: Is monitoring land area sufficient?
Non-USGS Publications**
**Disclaimer: The views expressed in Non-USGS publications are those of the author and do not represent the views of the USGS, Department of the Interior, or the U.S. Government.
Science and Products
Monitoring and Adaptive Management Plan for Deepwater Horizon Natural Resource Damage Assessment (NRDA) Project: Large-scale Marsh Creation – Upper Barataria Component
Restoring Texas Coastal Wetlands: Decision Support for the Beneficial Use of Dredged Material
Developing a Decision Support Tool to Inform Louisiana’s Climate Change Adaptation Strategy
Wetland Carbon Working Group: Improving Methodologies and Estimates of Carbon and Greenhouse Gas Flux in Wetlands
Understanding Impacts of Sea-Level Rise and Land Management on Critical Coastal Marsh Habitat
The Response of Coastal Wetlands to Sea-level Rise: Understanding how Macroscale Drivers Influence Local Processes and Feedbacks
Impacts of coastal and watershed changes on upper estuaries: causes and implications of wetland ecosystem transitions along the US Atlantic and Gulf Coasts
Understanding Impacts of Sea-Level Rise and Land Management on Critical Coastal Marsh Habitat
Identification of Hydrologic Controls on Coastal Spartina patens Marshes and Optimal Hydrological Conditions for Sustainable Mottled Duck Habitat
RESTORE Science: Inventory of Gulf Ecosystem Indicators Using an Ecological Resilience Framework
Coastal wetland vegetation and elevation data characterizing a Sudden Vegetation Dieback event in San Bernard National Wildlife Refuge in 2019
Long-term soil carbon data and accretion from four marsh types in Mississippi River Delta in 2015
Field and simulated data to construct hypervolumes of coastal wetland plant states for resilience quantification, Louisiana, USA (2016-2017)
Short term soil carbon data and accretion rates from four marsh types in Mississippi River Delta collected in 2015
Modeling soil pore water salinity response to drought in tidal freshwater forested wetlands
Rapid peat development beneath maturing mangrove forests: quantifying ecosystem changes along a 25-year chronosequence of created coastal wetlands
Local and landscape-scale data describing patterns of coastal wetland loss in the Texas Chenier Plain, U.S.A.
Salt marsh phenology and sexual reproductive characteristics at reference and restored sites in Louisiana, USA (2016)
Salt marsh carbon dynamics under altered hydrologic regimes and elevated CO2 conditions, Louisiana, USA (2014-2015)
Early growth interactions between a mangrove and an herbaceous salt marsh species are not affected by elevated CO2 or drought, Louisiana saltmarsh, 2015
Primary production across a coastal wetland landscape in Louisiana, U.S.A. (2012-2014)
Organic matter decomposition across a coastal wetland landscape in Louisiana, U.S.A. (2014-2015)
A model of the spatiotemporal dynamics of soil carbon following coastal wetland loss applied to a Louisiana salt marsh in the Mississippi River Deltaic Plain
Modeling impacts of drought-induced salinity intrusion on carbon dynamics in tidal freshwater forested wetlands
Presence of the herbaceous marsh species Schoenoplectus americanus enhances surface elevation gain in transitional coastal wetland communities exposed to elevated CO2 and sediment deposition events
Potential for carbon and nitrogen sequestration by restoring tidal connectivity and enhancing soil surface elevations in denuded and degraded south Florida mangrove ecosystems
Preface to book: Wetland carbon and environmental management
Summary of wetland carbon and environmental management: Path forward
Carbon fluxes and potential soil accumulation within Greater Everglades cypress and pine forested wetlands
Modeling the impacts of hydrology and management on carbon balance at the Great Dismal Swamp, Virginia and North Carolina, USA
Carbon flux, storage, and wildlife co-benefits in a restoring estuary
The importance of wetland carbon dynamics to society: Insight from the Second State of the Carbon Cycle Science Report
Ecosystem service co-benefits provided through wetland carbon management
Tradeoffs in habitat value to maximize natural resource benefits from coastal restoration in a rapidly eroding wetland: Is monitoring land area sufficient?
Non-USGS Publications**
**Disclaimer: The views expressed in Non-USGS publications are those of the author and do not represent the views of the USGS, Department of the Interior, or the U.S. Government.