Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences

Peatland scientist and Zumba teacher

A person stands on a landing above a peatland holding moss up to the camera
Jesse Rush shows off Sphagnum moss — the ecosystem engineers of peatlands
- Courtesy of Jess Rush

Jesse Rush is a PhD student in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology (EBIO) studying carbon cycling in northern peatland ecosystems — and she is also the lead graduate student representative for the CIRES Early-Career Assembly (CECA). She has worked on multiple long-term global change projects, including a water-table manipulation experiment in Alaska and a warming and carbon dioxide treatment experiment in a bog site. Rush loves to read anything Becky Chambers, who writes “amazing cozy science fiction.” And she teaches Zumba at the CU Boulder Rec Center.

A person wearing bright green Shrek ears and a wide-brimmed hat takes a selfie in a forest under blue skies

Jess Rush wears Shrek ears while doing fieldwork in Alaska — "because Shrek loves swamps."

Humans of CIRES Q&A

Q: What are you studying at CIRES?

I study how climate change is affecting carbon cycling in northern peatland ecosystems.

Q: What are you most passionate about professionally?

I'm passionate about leveraging long-term global change experiments. I've been fortunate enough to work at APEX, a long-term water-table manipulation experiment in an Alaskan fen, and SPRUCE, a bog site undergoing elevated warming and elevated carbon dioxide treatments.

Q: What book could you read over and over again?

Anything by Becky Chambers! She writes amazing "cozy" science fiction books but my favorite is "A Psalm for the Wild Built".

Q: Tell us about a hobby of yours.

I teach Zumba at the rec center here on Main Campus! Come join!