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Education
August 2017 - August 2023
June 2014 - August 2017
September 2010 - May 2014
Publications
Publications (13)
Ecosystem management is integral to the future of soils, yet anthropogenic drivers represent a key source of uncertainty in ecosystem models. First- and new-generation soil models formulate many soil pools using first-order decomposition, which tends to generate simpler yet numerous parameters. Systems or complexity theory, developed across various...
Ecological systems, as is often noted, are complex. Equally notable is the generalization that complex systems tend to be oscillatory, whether Huygens' simple patterns of pendulum entrainment or the twisted chaotic orbits of Lorenz’ convection rolls. The analytics of oscillators may thus provide insight into the structure of ecological systems. One...
Resistance and resilience have become important concepts in the evaluation of disturbance events, providing a framework that is useful in light of the expected increase in frequency and occurrences of hurricanes as a consequence of climate change. Hurricane Maria landed on Puerto Rico as a category 4 storm in September of 2017. Among the affected e...
Soils are increasingly acknowledged as complex systems, with potential non-linear behaviors having important implications for ecosystem and Earth system dynamics, but soil models could improve adoption of analytical tools from the broader interdisciplinary field of complex systems. First- and new-generation soil models formulate many soil pools usi...
Soils are increasingly recognized as complex systems, emphasizing a need to study unique properties such as long-tailed scaling laws and the role of indirect interactions among arboreal above- and below-ground soil invertebrates. However, few studies consider the above-below-ground connections mediated by invertebrates' activity and behavior compar...
Emerging zoonoses (new infectious diseases where pathogens circulate between humans and domestic and wild animals) follow ecological and evolutionary processes that are becoming more common, undermining our ability to achieve the sustainable development goal of good health and well-being. Agriculture has been implied as a major force promoting emer...
Systems theory is increasingly important for understanding the recently globalized Anthropocene period. Popular ideas from complex systems in physical and social sciences appear in some news media, including ‘fractals’ and ‘six degrees of separation’. One key example complex system is soil, which is both the namesake for humans (i.e., “humus”) and...
About half of all forests are tropical and secondary, making tropical forest regeneration integral to future forests. Tree stand biomass and taxonomic richness can recover in a few decades, but relative abundances may lag indefinitely. Since most forests are within a km of a habitat edge, edge effects likely affect community composition regeneratio...
Urban soils have been degraded by decades of industrial activities, but they also represent opportunities to improve food sovereignty for urban residents practicing urban agriculture. Urban growers often use varying practices of compost, tillage, and cover cropping, yet further integrated approaches could facilitated by model analyses of how differ...
Ecological systems, as is often noted, are complex. Equally notable is the generalization that complex systems tend to be oscillatory, whether Huygens simple patterns of pendulum entrainment or the twisted chaotic orbits of Lorenz convection rolls. The analytics of oscillators may thus provide insight into the structure of ecological systems. One o...
The metacommunity, as it evolved from Levins's metapopulation, provides a framework to consider the spatial organization of species interactions. A defining feature of metapopulations and metacommunities is that organisms (populations or communities) are connected via migration. An important result from Levins's metapopulation work – that increasin...
The metacommunity, as it evolved from Levin's metapopulation, provides a framework to consider the spatial organization of species interactions. Arguably the most fundamental feature of metapopulations and metacommunities are that demes are connected via migration. An important result from Levin's metapopulation work - that increasing migration low...