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Jesse Radolinski

Post-Doctoral Associate

Post-Doctoral Associate

Environmental Science & Technology 0113 H.J. Patterson Hall 4065 Campus Drive College Park, MD 20742-2315

Expertise

  • Hydrologist
  • Water and solute transport

Education

  • Ph.D. in Crop and Soil Environmental Sciences, Virginia Tech, 2019
  • B.S. in Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Mary Washington, 2015

I am a vadose zone hydrologist specializing in water and solute transport. My research has sought to understand how a spectrum of flow heterogeneity affects contaminant mobility in soils and gives rise to (eco)hydrological separation between fast flowing drainage recharging streams versus less mobile water that supplies transpiration. My work addresses water research topics ranging from hydrological mixing controls in soils to quantifying the impact of various climate change trajectories on the storage and movement of water through ecosystems. This involves the use of field and laboratory experimentation, as well as tracer and modeling techniques.

My post-PhD work includes:  1. University of Innsbruck in Austria where I coordinated experimentation for an international climate manipulation and global change project (ClimGrass and/or ClimGrassHydro), and 2. the University of Maryland where I am working to refine hydrological controls on phosphorus transport from agricultural soils.

Professional Work

  • Postdoctoral Researcher, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA (2023-present)
  • Lecturer, University of Innsbruck, Innsbruck, Austria (2021-2023)
  • Postdoctoral Researcher, University of Innsbruck, Innsbruck, Austria (2020-2023)
  • Graduate Research Assistant, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia, USA (2020-2023)

Teaching

Teaching Aid: 

  • Physics of Pollution (undergraduate course, Virginia Tech)
  • Fundamentals of Environmental Science (undergraduate course, Virginia Tech)
  • Wetland Soils (undergraduate course, Virginia Tech)

Instructed or Co-instructed: 

  • Data Analysis for Environmental Science (graduate course, University of Innsbruck)
  • Project Study: Field methods in ecohydrology (undergraduate and graduate course, University of Innsbruck)
  • Soil Physical and Hydrological Properties (graduate course, University of Innsbruck)
  • Special Topics in Functional Ecology: Scientific Literature Discussions (graduate course, University of Innsbruck)
  • Scientific Presentation (graduate course, University of Innsbruck)
     

Publications

Dr. Radolinski on ResearchGate

Dr. Radolinski on Google Scholar

Selected Publications: 

  • Radolinski, J.; Le, H.; Hilaire, S. S.; Xia, K.; Scott, D.; Stewart, R. D. J. S. r., A spectrum of preferential flow alters solute mobility in soils. Scientific Reports 2022, 12, (1), 1-11.

  • Hilaire, S. S.; Chen, C.; Pan, Z.; Radolinski, J.; Stewart, R. D.; Maguire, R. O.; Xia, K., Subsurface Manure Injection Reduces Surface Transport of Antibiotic Resistance Genes but May Create Antibiotic Resistance Hotspots in Soils. Environmental Science & Technology 2022.

  • Radolinski, J.; Pangle, L.; Klaus, J.; Stewart, R. D., Testing the ‘two water worlds’ hypothesis under variable preferential flow conditions. Hydrological Processes 2021, 35, (6), e14252.

  • Radolinski, J.; Wu, J.; Xia, K.; Hession, W. C.; Stewart, R. D., Plants mediate precipitation-driven transport of a neonicotinoid pesticide. Chemosphere 2019, 222, 445-452.

  • Radolinski, J.; Wu, J.; Xia, K.; Stewart, R., Transport of a neonicotinoid pesticide, thiamethoxam, from artificial seed coatings. Science of the Total Environment 2018, 618, 561-568.