Richard G. Smith

Richard G. Smith

I’m an agroecologist working at the interface between plant community ecology and agriculture. My research interests involve weed ecology and management, the role of diversity in agroecosystem function, plant invasions, community assembly theory, and trophic interactions. The overall goal of my research is to better understand the ecological interactions that underpin agricultural production systems so as to improve the economic and environmental sustainability of agriculture.

My work here at Penn State is focused mainly on understanding and addressing weed management, environmental quality, and profitability issues in organic feed and forage production systems typical of the mid-Atlantic region. I am also developing research aimed at assessing the role of cropping system diversity in mediating weed-crop competition. Prior to coming to Penn State, I was a Research Ecologist with the USDA-ARS, Exotic and Invasive Weeds Research Unit in Albany, CA (2006–2008) and a Postdoctoral Research Associate in the Department of Land Resources and Environmental Sciences at Montana State University (2005–2006). My Ph.D. research was conducted at Michigan State University’s W.K. Kellogg Biological Station (1999–2005), and focused on the role of crop diversity in weed community assembly and agroecosystem function. My undergraduate degree (B.S. in biology) was attained at the University of New Mexico (1992–1996).

Much of my worldview has been shaped by my experiences as a Peace Corps volunteer in Papua New Guinea (1997–1999) and my childhood growing up on the Navajo Reservation in northwest New Mexico.

My free time is happily occupied by my four-year-old daughter Sydney and explorations of beautiful central Pennsylvania.

Contact Rich.

Curriculum vitae

Publications