David McLagan

Assistant Professor

he/him

Geology and Geological Sciences

Environmental Studies

Dr. David McLagan

FEWA Lab - Fire, Earth, Water, and Air: Contaminant Biogeochemistry Lab

Our lab at 成人大片, Lead by Dr. David McLagan, has set out to develop global strategies to reduce the impact of pollutants.

fewalab.ca

 

*NEW PhD position currently available, click here for more info!

 

Contact Information:

Bruce Building, Room 320
BioSciences Complex, Room 3230

Email: david.mclagan@queensu.ca

The roots of my education and research are in environmental sciences, an intrinsically multi-disciplinary area of science. Naturally, my research has evolved to be highly interdisciplinary; I have published studies spanning the atmosphere, biosphere, lithosphere, and hydrosphere. Central to this research is understanding the biogeochemical cycling of contaminants within and between the Earth鈥檚 鈥渟pheres鈥 with a focus on the development of novel and accessible technologies and methods to advance our scientific understanding of contaminant biogeochemistry. This relates to my philosophy of 鈥淕lobal Science鈥 that encourages the dissemination of information, intersectoral collaboration, bridging of Knowledge systems, and empowers local scientists and communities across world. I use tools such as stable isotopes, passive sampling, unpiloted aerial vehicles, sensors, and dendrochronology (among other techniques) to assess the spatiotemporal dynamics of organic and inorganic compounds in the environment.

I am actively recruiting students across all levels (undergrad, Masters, PhD) and a postdoc. Current research projects involve (i) the study of wildfire contaminant emissions and plume chemistry using unpiloted aerial vehicles, (ii) assessing internal tree physiological processing of mercury and other metals using a multi-analyses approach, including stable mercury isotopes (do fungi play a role in this?), (iii) dendrochronological archiving of historical uses of mercury and other metals, (iv) The case of the missing mercury: understanding the fate of mercury used in artisanal small scale gold mining. Interested students and researchers are welcome to contact me directly about opportunities.

  • Emerging Research in Mercury Research (International) Award (2024)
  • NWT Cumulative Impact Monitoring Program (CIMP) Grant (2024)
  • Governor General's Innovation Award (2023)
  • NSERC Discovery Grant (2023)
  • Canadian Foundation for Innovation (CFI) JELF Grant (2023)
  • German Science Foundation (DFG) Research Project Grant
  • NSERC Post-Doctoral Fellowship (PDF)
  • Governor General鈥檚 Gold Medal (PhD), University of Toronto
  • NSERC Alexander Graham Bell Canada Graduate Scholarship 鈥 Doctoral (CGS-D)
  • University Medal, Griffith University

McLagan, D. S., Esser, C., Schwab, L., Wiederhold, J. G., Richard, J. H., & Biester, H. (2024). Organic matters, but inorganic matters too: column examination of elevated mercury sorption on low organic matter aquifer material using concentrations and stable isotope ratios. SOIL, 10(1), 77-92.

鈥嬧嬧嬧嬧嬧嬧婦astoor, A., Angot, H., Bieser, J., Christensen, J. H., Douglas, T. A., Heimb眉rger-Boavida, L. E., Jiskra, M., Mason, R.P., McLagan, D.S., ... & Zdanowicz, C. (2022). Arctic mercury cycling. Nature Reviews Earth & Environment, 3(4), 270-286.

McLagan, D. S., Schwab, L., Wiederhold, J. G., Chen, L., Pietrucha, J., Kraemer, S. M., & Biester, H. (2022). Demystifying mercury geochemistry in contaminated soil鈥揼roundwater systems with complementary mercury stable isotope, concentration, and speciation analyses. Environmental Science: Processes & Impacts.  

McLagan, D. S., Stupple, G. W., Darlington, A., Hayden, K., & Steffen, A. (2021). Where there is smoke there is mercury: Assessing boreal forest fire mercury emissions using aircraft and highlighting uncertainties associated with upscaling emissions estimates. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 21(7), 5635-5653.

McLagan, D. S., Monaci, F., Huang, H., Lei, Y. D., Mitchell, C. P., & Wania, F. (2019). Characterization and quantification of atmospheric mercury sources using passive air samplers. Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, 124(4), 2351-2362.

Parajulee, A., Lei, Y. D., Cao, X., McLagan, D. S., Yeung, L. W., Mitchell, C. P., & Wania, F. (2018). Comparing winter-time herbicide behavior and exports in urban, rural, and mixed-use watersheds. Environmental Science: Processes & Impacts, 20(5), 767-779.

McLagan, D. S., Mitchell, C. P., Huang, H., Lei, Y. D., Cole, A. S., Steffen, A., ... & Wania, F. (2016). A high-precision passive air sampler for gaseous mercury. Environmental Science & Technology Letters3(1), 24-29.

Wild, S., McLagan, D., Schlabach, M., Bossi, R., Hawker, D., Cropp, R., ... & Nash, S. B. (2015). An Antarctic research station as a source of brominated and perfluorinated persistent organic pollutants to the local environment. Environmental science & technology49(1), 103-112.

Full list: