Matthew J Cashman, Ph.D.
Matthew is a Physical Scientist with the USGS Water Mission Area. His expertise focuses on the interaction of surface water, water quality, and geomorphology on aquatic ecology and habitats. His work involves conducting integrated water availability and ecological assessments at national and regional scales.
Matthew's research interests are in the interdisciplinary interactions between surface water hydrology, geomorphology, and ecology, particularly as it relates to habitat conditions. His current work primarily focuses on regional and national water availability and ecological assessments, with an emphasis on detangling the impact of multiple, co-occurring stressors.
He approaches problems through leveraging big-data, machine-learning, custom application development, and the use of causal inference statistical techniques to quantify causal effects in complex, multi-stressor environments.
His previous work has involved machine-learning modeling of ecological and habitat conditions, geomorphic and habitat trend analysis via analysis of gage data, paleoecological reconstruction of river corridors, erosion and habitat mapping using Unmanned Aerial Systems and lidar, developing tools to identify the sources of sediment degrading river habitat, including sediment fingerprinting, restoration monitoring, detection of harmful algal blooms with remote sensing, and the development of cloud-based automated deep learning tools to assist in the maintenance and detection of sensor anomalies at USGS continuous water quality stations.
Professional Experience
2023 – Present: Physical Scientist, US Geological Survey, Water Mission Area
2023: Acting Surface-Water Specialist, US Geological Survey, Maryland-Delaware-DC Water Science Center
2021–2023: Supervisory Hydrologist, Sediment and Surface Water Studies Team Lead, US Geological Survey, Maryland-Delaware-DC Water Science Center
2020: Acting Supervisory Hydrologist, US Geological Survey, Marylan
2016-2020: Hydrologist, US Geological Survey, Maryland-Delaware-DC Water Science Center
2013-2014: Guest Scientist, Fondazione Edmund Mach, Department of Agroecosystems and Bioresources, San Michele All’adige, Italy
Education and Certifications
Ph.D., River Science, Queen Mary University of London and Freie Universität Berlin Dissertation: The effect of large wood on river physical habitat and nutritional dynamics
M.S., Biological Sciences (Ecology), Fordham University, Bronx, NY
B.S., Biological Sciences, Fordham University, Bronx, NY
Abstracts and Presentations
Cashman MJ. 2018. Structure-from-Motion surveying: A paradigm shift in geomorphic monitoring (invited seminar). Towson University. Towson, MD; March 9, 2018.
Cashman MJ and J Bell. 2018. Structure-from-Motion Surveying: