Camille Abadie

I am a postdoctoral researcher at Trinity College Dublin, working on grassland demography and competition for water and nutrients in the QUINCY land surface model. The aim of my research is to better understand vegetation responses to climate change, including extreme events such as droughts, and to improve how these processes are represented in models, helping to reduce uncertainties in projections of ecosystem dynamics.

Before this, I completed my PhD at the Laboratory for Sciences of Climate and Environment (LSCE) in France, where I investigated how to improve gross primary production and transpiration fluxes in the ORCHIDEE model using carbonyl sulfide (COS) measurements and data assimilation techniques.

Across both my PhD and postdoctoral work, I integrate a variety of observations, including in situ flux measurements, proxies such as COS and solar-induced fluorescence (SIF), remote sensing data, and multi-scale modeling ranging from site-level studies to global simulations.

I hold an MSc in Climate, Land Use, and Ecosystem Services from AgroParisTech - Paris-Saclay University, and an engineering degree in Environmental Sciences from AgroParisTech.