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Curriculum
Vitae
Research Laboratory
ARISE
Accelerated Research In
the Science of the Environment
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Teaching
Principles of Ecology
Environmental Sciences
Core I Curriculum
Core III Curriculum
Global Water Issues
Graduate Students:
Irene
Mundali
G. Mokua
Ogendi
Anindita
SenGupta
Tracy
Woodruff
Farida
Forouzan
Rodney
Wright
Wes Klasky
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Dr. Jennifer L. Bouldin
Director, Ecotoxicology Research Facility
Assistant Research Professor

B.S. - 1976 - Medical
Technology,
University of Arkansas School for Medical Sciences,
Little Rock, AR
Ph.D. - 2004 - Environmental Sciences,
Arkansas State University, State University, AR
Office: Ecotoxicology Research Facility, Room
102
Phone: (870) 972-2570
Fax: (870) 972-2577
Email:
jbouldin@astate.edu
Aquatic ecotoxicology
- Aquatic vegetation -
phytoremediation
- Modification of agricultural
runoff through vegetative and soil interaction
- Sediments, sediment
remediation
- Aquatic habitat assessment
- Aquatic toxicity of
nanoparticles to laboratory test organisms
Dr. Bouldin's research includes
the interaction of
agricultural runoff with vegetated aquatic systems,
specifically, pesticide mitigation through
interactions with resident aquatic vegetation.
Additional research interests includes watershed assessment, risk assessment associated with large-scale
agricultural landscapes, and chemical
characterization of well water at Judd Hill
Plantation, Poinsett County, AR.
Additional research at
Judd Hill Plantation includes soil and water
conservation of sustainable cotton production.
This research team is utilizing cover crops, water
and soil quality measurements to develop a
sustainable index for continual cotton production.
Additional research includes
watershed monitoring on the Upper Strawberry
River Subwatersheds in collaboration with the Fulton
County Conservation District. This research is
funded through the
Arkansas
Natural Resource Commission nonpoint source
management programs.
Her research team is also
investigating the toxicity of nanoparticles to
standard laboratory test organisms and food chain
transfer of these nanocrystals. Quantum dots
are water miscible nanoparticles and Dr. Bouldin and
her research team has traced the uptake into algal
cells and transfer through a simple food chain to
Ceriodaphnia dubia. Results of this
research appear in Environmental
Toxicology & Chemistry 27(9):1958-1963.
She and coauthors have also published related
articles in the Bulletin of Environmental
Contamination & Toxicology (2008) and the
Proceedings of NSTI Nanotechnology
(2007).
Dr. Bouldin's newest research project
is validating a binary disinfection system
for a Department of Homeland Security funded
project. This research is in contract with
Exoxemis, Inc, a Little Rock, AR based company.
As Director of the
Ecotoxicology
Research Facility she teaches Good Laboratory
Practice to students and faculty of this Multi-User
Facility. She also conducts Whole Effluent
Testing workshops for Wastewater Managers and Water
Treatment Managers sanctioned through the Arkansas Dept
of Environmental Quality and
Arkansas Department of Health and Water Quality workshops for
Jonesboro Public School Teachers through the SD2, No
Child Left Behind Grant.
Dr. Bouldin is the Director of the
Accelerated Research In
the Science of the Environment (ARISE)
program at ASU. This NSF-funded summer
internship is a 3-week intensive
research and learning experience for upper level
undergraduates and recently graduated students
interested in the geosciences and environmental
sciences.
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