
The NREL Award of Excellence
in Ecosystem Science was established by the Natural Resource Ecology
Laboratory, NREL, in 1997. It is presented to an individual whose independent
and interdisciplinary research has contributed to sustained, innovative
syntheses and new insights in the study of ecosystems.
Award of Excellence in Ecosystem
Science Lecture
Thirty Years of Ecosystem Research in the Serengeti
2004 Awardee - Dr. Samuel McNaughton
(Syracuse University)
April 26, 2007
3:00 p.m.
Rooms 213/215, Lory Student Center, CSU
Immediately followed by the 2007 award
presenation to
Dr. Pamela Matson, Stanford University
Reception to follow
2007 AWARDEE
Dr.
Pamela A. Matson
Pamela Matson is the Richard and Rhoda Goldman
Professor of Environmental Studies in the Department of Geological
and Environmental Sciences, the Naramore Dean of the School of Earth
Sciences, and McMurtry Fellow for Undergraduate Education. She is also
a senior fellow at the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies
and the Woods Institute for the Environment, both at Stanford University.
Her research interests include ecological and biogeochemical responses
to agricultural intensification, climate change, and nitrogen deposition,
and the interactions among decision-making and environmental issues
in developing regions. She was an early contributor to the international
global change research program, serving in leadership positions in
the International Geosphere-Biosphere Program and Projects, and on
the National Academy Board on Global Change. She has more
recently been a leader in efforts to harness science and technology for
sustainable development, serving as a member of the National Academies
Board on Sustainable Development and as the founding chair of the National
Academies Roundtable on Science and Technology for Sustainability. Her
contributions have been recognized through election to the American Academy
of Arts and Sciences and the National Academy of Sciences, as a Fellow
of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and as a
recipient of a MacArthur Prize. She served as president
of the Ecological Society of America and currently serves as the founding
editor of the Annual Review of Environment and Resources. She is a trustee
of the World Wildlife Fund (US) and the National Park Conservation Association.
PAST RECIPIENTS
2004 Dr.
Samuel J. McNaughton
Professor McNaughton is internationally recognized for his contributions
to the field of grazing ecosystem ecology. He is the William Rand Keenan Jr.
Professor of Biology at Syracuse University, where he has been since
1966. His professional interests and work include ecosystem and
plant ecology, grassland ecosystems, ecology of large mammalian herbivores,
and conservation biology. He has conducted definitive research in the
world’s premier grazing ecosystem, the Serengeti, for three decades.
He is the author of a widely used textbook in ecology, and over 130 papers.
2002
Dr. Thomas Rosswall
Rosswall has been instrumental in the development of microbial
ecology, both nationally and internationally. His leadership in three
major ecosystem projects has been important not only for ecosystem
sciences in Sweden, but also for the development of international networks,
which have fostered intensive collaboration between scientists in many
countries. His efforts to link scientists in the North to those in
the South as well as South-South networks should also be noted.
His work on carbon and nitrogen cycling has ranged from microcosm studies to
the globe and has been able to link deep process understanding to modelling
efforts of entire systems at all scales. He has played a pivotal role in the
SCOPE and IGBP efforts to understand the functioning of the global ecosystem.
Work on linking biological, chemical and physical processes has later also
included considerations of the human aspects and Mankind as a crucial forcing
function.
He is currently the Executive Director of the International Council
for Science, Paris, France. Formerly he has been Director of the International
Foundation for Science (IFS), President of the Swedish University of
Agricultural Sciences, Director of the International START Secretariat,
Executive Director of the International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme
(IGBP) and Professor of Water in Nature and Society at the Universities
of Stockholm and Linköping, Sweden. He has also served on numerous
international and national committees and boards. He is an elected member
of four learned societies.
1999
Dr. David Coleman
The 1999 recipient of the Excellence in Ecosystem Science award is David Coleman,
Institute of Ecology at the University of Georgia in Athens.
Dr. David Coleman, professor and research scientist at Colorado State
University from 1972-85, has become the second recipient of NREL's Award
for Excellence in Ecosystem Science. Coleman, recognized for his pioneering
studies in plant roots, microbes, soil fauna and soil physical properties,
was presented with this distinguished honor in conjunction with NREL's
External Advisory Committee meeting.
During his tenure here, Coleman was a senior research scientist at NREL and
professor of entomology and zoology. Dr. Coleman has written more than 230
journal publications. His contributions to soil ecology have been recognized
by a Professional Achievement Award from the Soil Ecology Society and his election
as Fellow of the Soil Science Society of America. Dave is now at the Institute
of Ecology at the University of Georgia in Athens.
1997
Dr. Jerry M. Melillo
The 1997 recipient of the Excellence in Ecosystem Science award is Jerry M.
Melillo, Co-Director of the Ecosystems Center at the Marine Biological laboratory
in Woods Hole, Massachusetts.
Dr. Melillos research on biogeochemistry includes work on global change,
the ecological consequences of tropical deforestation, and sustainable management
of forest ecosystems. He was a covening lead author on the 1990 and 1995 IPCC
assessments of climate change. He has served as a vice-chair of the International
Geosphere-Biosphere Programme (IGBP) and is currently President of ICSUs
Scientific Committee on Problems of the Environment (SCOPE). He is also a member
of the SSC of START (System for Analysis, Research and Training), a joint activity
of IGBP, IHDP and WCRP.
Dr. Melillo founded the Marine Biological Laboratorys Semester
in Environmental Science, an education program for undergraduates from
small liberal arts colleges and universities in which students spend
a term learning and doing environmental science in Woods Hole. Dr. Melillo
also has a strong interest in science policy. He served as the Associate
Director for Environment at the Office of Science and Technology Policy
in the Executive Office of the President for 15 months in 1996 and 1997.
Dr. Melillo has authored more than 200 peer-reviewed journal articles
and two textbooks. |
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