About Us

The Sierra Nevada Network (SIEN) is one of 32 National Park Service inventory and monitoring networks across the country that monitor the condition of park ecosystems. SIEN works with four parks: Sequoia and Kings Canyon, Yosemite, and Devils Postpile. Interested in seasonal field positions? Visit our Work with Us page.

SIEN is responsible to a board of directors and technical committee composed of park superintendents and staff. Program guidance and oversight is also provided by the National Park Service's Inventory and Monitoring Division. The network leverages staff and resources by collaborating with parks, other networks, and partners.

SIEN has had recent staff turnover due to retirements and people leaving for other opportunities. The network is in process of hiring a new program manager, and physical scientist, followed later by an ecologist, logistics coordinator, and shared science communication specialist.

Need to get in touch? Here's how to contact us.

Network Staff

A woman smiles in front of a bright green meadow with yellow flowers. A few trees just starting to leaf out and a mountain is visible in the background.

Anne Pfaff, Network Program Manager

Anne Pfaff has returned to the NPS in a new role as Network Program Manager for the Sierra Nevada Network after 25+ years with USGS. Anne started her career with the NPS over 30 years ago as a Student Conservation Association Interpretation intern in Badlands NP. Her early career path also included a variety of interpretation, resource management, and wilderness jobs at St. Croix National Scenic Riverway, Great Basin NP, and also as Refuge Management Specialist with USFWS in Klamath Basin. Anne began her career in the Sierra Nevada in 1999 when she was hired as an ecologist and then research coordinator with the USGS Sequoia-Kings Canyon Field Station. While working for USGS, Anne helped design, develop, and execute many field research projects in forest and fire ecology across California while focusing mainly in the Sierras. Anne has a BS in Biology from Yale College and a MS in Biology from University of Northern Colorado. Her graduate research focused on the behavior and population dynamics of the Gore Range mountain goat herd near Silverthorne, CO. Her current areas of interest include landscape conservation and broadscale resource management projects of all kinds. Outside of work, Anne enjoys jogging, reading, hiking, and traveling and visiting with her family.

Woman sitting on granite outcrop, looking back at camera. Views of large granite domes in background.

Sarah Wakamiya, Data Manager

Sarah joined the Sierra Nevada Network in August 2021. In her role, she designs and manages applications and workflows for storing, analyzing, and sharing network data. She has been a Data Manager with the I&M program for over a decade, previously working at the Mid-Atlantic Network, Northern Great Plains Network, and most recently the San Francisco Bay Area Network. She has a B.S. in Neurobiology and Physiology from the University of Maryland – College Park and a M.S. in Wildlife Ecology from Southern Illinois University – Carbondale. Her research as a graduate student focused on landscape-linked population dynamics for peregrine falcons and swamp rabbits. These days she is particularly drawn to the interaction of data and art through data visualization and loves learning about the different biological systems the I&M program monitors. When she’s not solving data puzzles, she enjoys trail running, rock climbing, art, and trying not to injure herself while learning to ski.

A woman with a beanie and sunglasses holds a large colorful fish

Kelly Martin, Physical Scientist

Kelly joined the Sierra Nevada Network in 2024 as the Physical Scientist. In her role, she leads water resources monitoring for SIEN lakes, rivers, and wetlands. Kelly holds a bachelor’s degree from Western Washington University and a master's degree in biology from CSU Fresno, where she focused on an ecotoxicology study in a remote alpine lake watershed. Her previous experience includes working with the National Park Service at North Cascades, Lake Clark, Yosemite, and Sequoia and Kings Canyon in various ecology and physical science roles. Additionally, Kelly has contributed to the Inventory and Monitoring lakes program at the North Coast and Cascades Network and Sierra Nevada Network. Outside of work, she enjoys painting, fly fishing, and mountain biking, which allows her to explore the beautiful landscapes she is dedicated to studying and preserving.

Seasonal Staff - And the Paths They Travel from Here

In the late spring, summer, and early fall our office building becomes more lively and busy than usual, when our seasonal staff arrive to conduct some of the most critical work of long-term monitoring - the field data collection! Without them and the data they collect, we would not have a long-term monitoring program. The seasonal staff who are drawn to our program love to spend their time in the extensive wilderness of our large parks, they become experts at packing backpacks efficiently, cooking with campstoves, navigating to remote sampling sites, and collecting excellent quality data. Some love it so much they come back for multiple seasons, and our program benefits from the long-term knowledge they bring to monitoring projects. They also appreciate the beauty of where they work, and getting to explore large chunks of the stunning wilderness of these parks.

In the following series of articles, some of our former seasonal staff share their forays into graduate school, and in some cases how their work here helped motivate and inspire them to continue their education, and explore in more depth the environmental sciences they were able to participate in here, and have the opportunity to do projects of their own.
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    Last updated: April 14, 2025