Todd Bittner
Director, Natural Areas Cornell University's Botanical Gardens, Arboretum, and Natural Areas

The garden’s natural areas program stewards 3,700 acres of biologically diverse nature preserves, representing nearly all the natural community types and rarest plant habitats in the central Finger Lakes region. These holdings include about 1/3 of campus and several beloved Cornell landscapes including Cascadilla and Fall Creek Gorges, Beebe Lake, Fall Creek Valley, and the Mundy Wildflower Garden, and off-campus jewels such as McLean Bogs, Ringwood Ponds, and Edwards Lake Cliffs. Todd leads the organization’s efforts to conserve native biodiversity and maintain the natural quality of these outdoor classrooms, to facilitate access and compatible recreational use, to support educational and research uses, and to preserve and steward these unique lands for future generations. Todd also oversees the University's Deer Management Programs, and serves on the Cornell Gorge Safety Committee and the Dryden Rail Trail Taskforce. Todd has a B.A. in biology from North Central College and an M.S. in Plant Biology from Southern Illinois University in Carbondale, and came to Cornell Botanic Gardens in 2008 after 15 years of preserving and managing state- and privately-owned natural areas across northern Illinois. He lives nearby in Ellis Hollow with his wife Tonya and daughters Shannon and Colby.