Who We AreBoard of Directors

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Kelly Munkittrick
Dr. Kelly Munkittrick
was appointed Scientific Director of the Canadian Water Network in March 2011,
a position where he leads the development of an innovative network focused on
providing clean, safe and sustainable water across Canada and internationally. Kelly
is also the Canada Research Chair in Ecosystem Health Assessment in the Canadian Rivers
Institute at the University of New Brunswick, where he assesses the
environmental impacts of industrial and agricultural activities and develops
methods for environmental effects monitoring and cumulative effects assessment
of multiple stressors on aquatic environments. Kelly received a BSc in fish and
wildlife biology in 1980 and an MSc in environmental physiology in 1983, both
from the University of Guelph, and completed a PhD in 1988 in the Department of
Biology at the University of Waterloo. In 1988 Kelly held a postdoctoral
fellowship at the University of Guelph, followed by an industrial fellowship at
EVS Consultants in North Vancouver, BC from 1989–90. In 1990 he joined the
Department of Fisheries and Oceans, Great Lakes Laboratory for Fisheries and
Aquatic Sciences, where he examined the environmental fate and effects of pulp
mill effluents in the Great Lakes, and helped write the National Environmental
Effects Monitoring regulations.
Kelly joined
the National Water Research Institute as Project Chief in 1996 and led a group
of scientists in their Ecosystem Health Assessment Project. Kelly was the Associate
Director of the Canadian Rivers Institute between 2001 and 2011, and has sat on
international boards for scientific societies, technical experts and has led
numerous working groups. Kelly has helped organize numerous international
meetings and workshops and has participated in several expert panels. He has
active research projects that assess environmental impacts in Sri Lanka,
Bhutan, Chile, Uruguay, Brazil, the United States and Canada, and he has
worked, taught or given invited lectures in more than 25 countries.
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