Robert Mitchell Pringle (born February 9, 1979) is an American biologist and conservationist.
He is professor and director of undergraduate studies in the department of ecology and evolutionary biology at Princeton University.[1][2]
Pringle's research combines field and laboratory methods to understand biological interactions and biodiversity loss in terrestrial ecosystems, chiefly African savannas.[3]
One major focus of Pringle's work has been understanding the ecological impacts of armed conflict and the dynamics of postwar ecosystem restoration in Mozambique’s Gorongosa National Park.[4][5][6][7][8][9][10]
Pringle's early research experimentally documented the keystone roles played by large herbivores, carnivores, and subterranean termites in regulating biodiversity and ecosystem function in savannas.[16][17]
In 2013, Pringle's lab was among the first to use DNA metabarcoding to understand dietary niche differentiation and its role in sustaining the coexistence of animal species.[18][19][20][21]
Pringle also worked with Princeton colleagues Corina Tarnita and Juan Bonachela to develop new theories about the formation of large, regular vegetation patterns, such as the Namib Desert fairy circles.[22][23]
Pringle's work in Gorongosa has focused on measuring the ecological and evolutionary impacts of losing large herbivores and carnivores, as well as the dynamics of community reassembly as these species have been restored.[24][25][26][10]
This research was featured in the Emmy Award nominated nature documentary, Nature’s Fear Factor.[27]
Pringle serves on the board of the Guanacaste Dry Forest Conservation Fund, a nonprofit organization supporting conservation and biodiversity research in Costa Rica’s Area de Conservación Guanacaste.[28] With Simon Levin and Corina Tarnita, he is the editor of the Monographs in Population Biology published by Princeton University Press, a series of influential books in ecology and evolutionary biology.[29]
Recognition
Pringle received the Early Career Investigator Award from the American Society of Naturalists in 2011 and was named an Early Career Fellow of the Ecological Society of America in 2015.[30][31][32]
Students at Princeton have described Pringle as a passionate and creative teacher.
[33]
The parasitoid wasp Lytopylus robpringlei was named after Pringle in 2011, in honor of his conservation work.[34] This species was later transferred into the genus Aerophilus.[35]
Pringle is married to Corina Tarnita, a mathematician and biologist who is also a professor at Princeton. Pringle and Tarnita have collaborated on multiple research projects, and they have one daughter.[37][38]
This article needs additional or more specific categories. Please help out by adding categories to it so that it can be listed with similar articles.(February 2023)