Karen Klinger

Lead GIS Analyst
Keller Science Action Center
Pronouns:She/Her/Hers

Karen Klinger is a Lead GIS Analyst for the Chicago Region and Andes-Amazon Program in the Keller Science Action Center. Her work involves developing data collection applications, conducting geospatial analyses, and producing and sharing data visualizations. At the Field Museum, she has worked on a variety of projects, including co-developing a national geospatial database and survey application for the Rights-of-Way as Habitat Working Group, co-leading a four-year monarch community science project in the Chicagoland area, developing surveys and cartographic products for the Rapid Social and Biological Inventory Program, and creating a web mapping application to visualize locations represented by the Field Guides Program.

Publications

  • Klinger KR, Hasle AF and Oberhauser KS (2024). Characteristics of urban milkweed gardens that influence monarch butterfly egg abundance. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution 12:1444460. doi: 10.3389/fevo.2024.1444460
  • Johnston MK, Hasle AF, Klinger KR, Lambruschi MP, Derby Lewis A, Stotz DF, et al. (2019). Estimating milkweed abundance in metropolitan areas under existing and user-defined scenarios. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution 7. doi: 10.3389/fevo.2019.00210
  • Derby Lewis A, Bouman MJ, Winter AM, Hasle AF, Stotz DF, Johnston MK, Klinger KR, Rosenthal A, and Czarnecki CA (2019). Does nature need cities? Pollinators reveal a role for cities in wildlife conservation. rontiers in Ecology and Evolution 7. doi: 10.3389/fevo.2019.00220

Education and Work

Karen received her B.S. in Wildlife Biology from the University of Vermont in 2008 and her M.S. in Geographic Information Systems from the University of Redlands in 2010.