TylerÌýNuckols

  • Ph.D. Student
  • ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES

Faculty Advisor

Karen Bailey

Education

  • M.S., Global Conservation Leadership, ¾«Í¯ÓûÅ® State University
  • B.S., Recreation Park and Tourism Sciences, Texas A&M University College Station

Research Interest

  • Coupled Human And Natural Systems
  • Human-Wildlife Interactions
  • Conservation Psychology
  • Human Well-Being
  • Conflict Adaptive Agro-ecosystems

Bio

Tyler Nuckols (they/them) is a Ph.D. Student in the Environmental Studies Program at the University of ¾«Í¯ÓûÅ® Boulder. At ¾«Í¯ÓûÅ®, Tyler is researching social-ecological approaches to mitigate negative human-elephant interactions that simultaneously improve local community livelihoods and achieve Asian elephant conservation aims.

Before coming to ¾«Í¯ÓûÅ®, Tyler has nearly a decade of experience as a practitioner, communicator, and community organizer in the environmental space, including in Cambodia on captive and wild elephant conservation and indigenous community rights and livelihoods, and here in ¾«Í¯ÓûÅ® communicating and organizing around issues related to climate change and environmental justice with Conservation ¾«Í¯ÓûÅ® and The Wilderness Society.

Tyler completed their M.S. in Global Conservation Leadership in 2021 at ¾«Í¯ÓûÅ® State University. Their thesis used systematic mapping to examine the state of global human-wildlife conflict research related to agricultural systems. Originally from Texas, Tyler completed their B.S. in Recreation Park and Tourism Sciences in 2014 and is now happy to call ¾«Í¯ÓûÅ® home for the past five years. When not thinking about elephants, Tyler is a recreational botanist, avid hiker, amateur cycler, and lover of dogs.