Search: Environmental Science Policy and Management
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Fung, Inez
Submitted by cmjones on March 16, 2007 - 1:39pm.Name of Person:
Inez Fung
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Department:
ESPM, Professor
Research Interests:
Climate and biogeochemical cycles. Geophysical fluid dynamics. Large scale numerical modeling. Remote sensing of earth systems. Atmosphere-ocean interactions, and atmosphere-biosphere interactions.
Achievements:
A principal research activity of Inez Fung is the carbon dioxide cycle. Fung’s lab uses details of the atmospheric CO2 distribution (e.g. the difference in hemispheric loading, the changes in the seasonal amplitude over time), together with atmospheric transport models to deduce the location of the carbon sink. Fung hypothesizes that the terrestrial biosphere of the northern hemisphere may be as important as the oceans as a repository for anthropogenic CO2. Another research focus is the dust cycle. Fine dust particles lofted from arid surfaces are transported long distances. While airborne, they reflect sunlight, but may, depending on their sizes and composition, absorb terrestrial radiation. When deposited to the surface oceans, the iron in the dust may be the critical limiting micronutrient for marine productivity in some ocean regions. To tackle this problem, she is combining mineralogic information about soil particles, satellite and in-situ observations, atmospheric circulation models and ocean biology models to gain an appreciation of the many roles of dust.
Stephens, Scott
Submitted by cmjones on March 6, 2007 - 11:24am.Name of Person:
Scott Stephens
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Department:
ESPM, Associate Professor
Research Interests:
Scott Stephens is interested in the interactions of wildland fire and ecosystems. This includes how prehistoric fires once interacted with ecosystems, how current wildland fires are affecting ecosystems, and how future fires and management may change this interaction. He is also interested in wildland fire policy and how it can be improved to meet the challenges of the next decades. How fire will be affected by climate change is a new area of research.
Range Ecology Seminar
Submitted by sprowles on October 24, 2007 - 3:26pm.Department:
ESPM
Course Number:
268
Course Title:
Range Ecology Seminar
Instructor:
Bartolome
Description:
A seminar course dealing with selected topics in ecology of rangelands
Units:
2
Offered:
Spring
Course Type:
Graduate
Design and Analysis of Ecological Research
Submitted by sprowles on September 12, 2007 - 2:06pm.Department:
ESPM
Course Title:
Design and Analysis of Ecological Research
Instructor:
de Valpine
Description:
This course will cover major study design and analysis methods for biological field
and lab studies. Students will be prepared for independent research and work in
natural resource fields. Topics will include:
* Linear regression*: single and multivariate
* Analysis of variance*: single- and multi-factor; fixed and random effects;
interactions
* Common study design issues including blocked plots, split plots, repeated
measures, and covariates
* Power analysis
* Maximum likelihood estimation and hypothesis testing
* Generalized linear models
* Possible other topics may be drawn from: non-parametric analysis; bootstrapping;
model selection with Information Criteria; wildlife mark-recapture methods; and
Bayesian methods
Computer labs will focus on instruction and exercises in the R statistical
programming language (equivalent to S-PLUS).
Examples and exercises will use data from ecological population, community,
ecosystem, behavioral, and/or evolutionary studies.
Units:
4
Offered:
Spring
Lindow, Steven
Submitted by cmjones on March 5, 2007 - 2:38pm.Name of Person:
Steven Lindow
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Department:
ESPM, Professor
Research Interests:
Steven Lindow's group studies a number of different bacteria, known as epiphytes, that live on the surface of plants. Their research emphasizes both molecular genetic and ecological approaches to the study of the interactions of epiphytic bacteria with other microorganisms on plants and of the interactions of these organisms with the plants on which they live.
Lindow, Steven
Submitted by cmjones on April 2, 2007 - 2:38pm.Name of Person:
Steven Lindow
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Department:
Plant and Microbial Biology, Professor
Research Interests:
Steven Lindow's group studies a number of different bacteria, known as epiphytes, that live on the surface of plants. Their research emphasizes both molecular genetic and ecological approaches to the study of the interactions of epiphytic bacteria with other microorganisms on plants and of the interactions of these organisms with the plants on which they live.
Sposito, Garrison
Submitted by cmjones on March 6, 2007 - 11:21am.Name of Person:
Garrison Sposito
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Department:
ESPM, Professor
Research Interests:
Physical geochemistry, especially coordination chemistry, surface chemistry, and colloidal behavior; mathematical models of transport processes in porous media; molecular simulations of natural aqueous systems.
Sposito, Garrison
Submitted by cmjones on April 2, 2007 - 3:17pm.Name of Person:
Garrison Sposito
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Department:
Civil and Environmental Engineering, Professor
Research Interests:
Physical geochemistry, especially coordination chemistry, surface chemistry, and colloidal behavior; mathematical models of transport processes in porous media; molecular simulations of natural aqueous systems.
Welter, Stephen
Submitted by cmjones on March 6, 2007 - 11:41am.Name of Person:
Stephen Welter
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Department:
ESPM, Professor
Research Interests:
Plant-insect interactions or understanding and managing insect populations in agricultural settings. One recent emphasis of the plant-insect work has been to understand the consequences of changes in either system traits or plant characteristics on the interactions of plant, herbivores, and their natural enemies.
Winickoff, David
Submitted by cmjones on March 6, 2007 - 11:43am.Name of Person:
David Winickoff
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Department:
ESPM, Assistant Professor
Research Interests:
Coming from law, bioethics, and STS (Science and Technology Studies), David Winickoff conducts research on the interaction of science, norms, and politics of human health and the environment, with a particular focus on the governance of biotechnology
