I am passionate about both teaching and research, which is why I became an associate professor at the University of Girona in 2006. I hold a bachelor's degree in Biology from the University of Barcelona and a PhD in Ecology from University Paris 6 (now Sorbonne Univ.). I teach courses in Catalan and English in Biology and Environmental Sciences, focusing on animal conservation and their interaction with humans. I am also a professor in the Master's program in Environmental Change and Socioecological Transition and a member of the Innovation Network on English as a Medium of Education (XID-EME). I regularly guide students in their final bachelor's projects, master's theses, and doctoral dissertations, focusing on animal ecology, fire ecology, and biodiversity conservation. I have supervised 7 doctoral theses and am a member of the Doctoral Program Committee in Environmental Science at the UdG. As the principal investigator at the UdG, I lead the European projects TREEADS and FIRE-ADAPT, as well as a PECT project on the biodiversity of dry Stone landscapes. I coordinate the Animal Biology Research Group at the UdG and am part of the SGR BioLand group. I have published over 60 articles in SCI-indexed journals, in addition to other scientific publications and conference presentations. I also participate in knowledge transfer activities to the forestry sector and give public lectures on ecology and biodiversity. My main research field explores the role of ecological disturbances on terrestrial fauna to improve conservation decisions. I have studied the territoriality of birds and the population dynamics of birds, small mammals, and cicadas in burned areas, as well as the effects of prescribed burns and post-fire logging on biodiversity and the ecosystem. Finally, my team develops environmental assessment technologies and decision support systems for burned areas.