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Remembering Paulette Ford

September 2, 2021

Portrait: Paulette Ford.
Dr. Paulette Ford had a 28-year career with the Forest Service.

On Aug. 28, Dr. Paulette Ford, a research ecologist in Albuquerque, passed away at Presbyterian Hospital, surrounded by her family. She was 56 years old.

Paulette Ford was born in San Diego and grew up in many places, including Morocco, due to her father’s career in the Navy. While in Morocco, she spent a lot of time running through fields and cork forests outside the city of Rabat, Morocco. Since there was no TV on base in Morocco, she became an avid reader. She attended the University of New Mexico for her undergraduate degrees in biology and psychology. There, she realized that she enjoyed field biology and took every opportunity to go on mammalogy and marine biology field trips. She was part of an all-female field crew funded by the National Science Foundation to trap mammals in Bolivia for the Museum of Southwestern Biology. While doing undergraduate research describing eight new species of parasites, a new parasite species was named in her honor, Eimeria paulettefordae. She spent time in the Peace Corps before returning to UNM for her master’s in biology.

She began her 28-year career with the Forest Service after working with the Partners in Flight exchange program, beginning with the Cooperative Education program at Rocky Mountain Research Station. She then completed her doctorate at the University of Arizona in 2000 and was converted to a full-time research ecologist position. She studied climate and climate variability as drivers of past and present grassland, shrubland, and desert floral and faunal compositions, distributions and ecosystem processes to assist in devising meaningful management.

Paulette Ford holding a drone.
Dr. Paulette Ford was a research ecologist with the Forest Service.

She was the Forest Service co-lead of the Southern Plains USDA Climate Hub and served as a member of The Wildlife Society’s Technical Review, an associate editor for the journals BioScience and Rangeland Ecology and Management, on the Natural Inquirer Board of Directors, and as a mentor for the National Science Foundation’s Research Experience for Undergraduates program with the University of New Mexico. She received 25 merit, achievement, and civil rights awards from RMRS and two awards from the Chief of the Forest Service for her work on grasslands and drought.

She hosted and mentored students and graduate students from Historically Black Colleges and Universities, Hispanic Colleges and Universities, Southwestern Indian Polytechnic Institute, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, as well as numerous graduate students at the University of New Mexico, Highlands University, New Mexico State University and Northern Arizona University.

Paulette was dedicated to helping those in need. She did volunteer work for the organization Habitat for Humanity, helped with Hurricane Katrina recovery efforts, participated in long-distance bicycling events to raise funds for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, and worked with local sponsors to host special conservation events and sponsor educational supplies to students from underserved communities.

Paulette’s impacts were widespread and substantial, from science, to editorial services, conservation education and communities in need. She was loved by people from many walks of life, and she will be remembered as a smart, vibrant science collaborator, an endearing and loyal friend, a humanitarian and as a devout Christian.

 

https://www.fs.usda.gov/inside-fs/memorial/remembering-paulette-ford