Dr. Sean Carey is a professor in the School of Geography & Earth Sciences at McMaster and is the Principal Investigator of Mountain Water Futures. His research interests include hydrological, biogeochemical, and land surface processes in natural and human impacted environments using field, lab, and modelling approaches.
Dr. Masaki Hayashi is a professor in the Department of Geoscience at the University of Calgary, and a Canada Research Chair in Physical Hydrology. He is the co-Principal Investigator of Mountain Water Futures. His research combines field and experimental data with mathematical analysis, to study alpine hydrology, permafrost, frozen soils, prairie hydrology, and hot springs.
Dr. Brian Menounos is a professor in the Geography program and Natural Resources and Environmental Studies Institute at the University of Northern British Columbia, and a Canada Research Chair in Glacier Change. He is the co-Principal Investigator of Mountain Water Futures. His research interests include process geomorphology, quaternary and surficial geology, and surface hydrology.
Dr. Stephen Déry is a professor in the Environmental Science and Engineering Program at the University of Northern British Columbia. His research focuses on hydrometeorological processes and their impacts on the surface energy and water budgets in high latitudes/altitudes within the context of climate change.
Dr. Jeffrey McKenzie is an associate professor and departmental chair in the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences at McGill University. His research focuses on hydrologic processes, and in understanding how hydrology is being impacted by climate change.
Dr. Richard Petrone is a professor in the Department of Geography & Environmental Management at the University of Waterloo. His research is focused on developing a further understand of soil-vegetation-atmosphere interactions, especially as influenced by hydrologic and climatic conditions.
Dr. John Pomeroy is a professor in the Department of Geography and Planning at the University of Saskatchewan, and a Canada Research Chair in Water Resources and Climate Change. His research interests are in physical hydrology emphasizing cold regions processes, watershed modeling, snow, forests, mountains, prairies, arctic, hydrometeorology, hydrochemistry, ecohydrology and instrumentation.
Dr. Rebecca Rooney is an assistant professor in the Department of Biology at the University of Waterloo. Her research examines how human-caused and natural ecological disturbances influence wetland communities, including birds, invertebrates and plants.
Dr. Ronald Stewart is a professor in the Department of Environment and Geography at the University of Manitoba. His research focuses on storms and their precipitation (mainly winter but not exclusively), droughts, storm-climate interactions, floods and future changes in these features.
Dr. Julie Thériault is an associate professor in the Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences at the Université du Québec à Montréal. Her research aims to better understand formation mechanisms of freezin rain, ice pellets, and wet snow, and the impact on the mesoscale circulation induced by phase changes using numerical modelling.
Dr. Cherie Westbrook is a professor in the Department of Geography and Planning at the University of Saskatchewan. Her research evaluates groundwater-surface water interactions in alpine wetlands, their response to climate change and disturbance, and developing new decision support tools for flood risk management.
Dr. Francis Zwiers is a professor and the director of the Pacific Climate Impacts Consortium at the University of Victoria. His expertise is in the application of statistical methods to the analysis of observed and simulated climate variability.