Susan Harrison | |
---|---|
Born | Susan Patricia Harrison |
Alma mater | Stanford University University of California, Davis |
Awards | Member of the National Academy of Sciences (2018) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Ecology [1] |
Institutions | University of California, Davis |
Thesis | The metapopulation dynamics of the Bay checkerspot butterfly, Euphydryas editha bayensis (1989) |
Website | desp |
Susan Patricia Harrison is a professor of ecology at the University of California, Davis who works on the dynamics of natural populations and ecological diversity. She is a fellow of the Ecological Society of America and the California Academy of Sciences. She has previously served as vice president of the American Society of Naturalists. [1] She was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 2018.
Harrison is from Sonoma, California. She studied zoology at University of California, Davis and graduated in 1983. [2] [3] Harrison switched to ecology for her graduate studies, and earned a master's degree in 1986. [2] Harrison joined Stanford University for her doctoral studies, completing her PhD in biology in 1989. [4] Her doctoral work considered the Edith's checkerspot butterfly and was supervised by Paul R. Ehrlich and Richard Karban. [5] [6] [7] [8]
After her PhD, Harrison was a postdoctoral fellow at Imperial College London, where she worked at Silwood Park. [2] [9] Harrison was appointed to the faculty at University of California, Davis in 1991. [2] She is a member of the John Muir Institute of the Environment. Her research considers plant species diversity. She has extensively studied the flora of the California region, and found that species and phylogenetic diversity align with the region's climate gradients. [2] The small-scale local diversity is similar to the large-scale diversity within the region. [2] [10] She studied metapopulations, which has previously been explained as existing between colonisation and extinction. Harrison demonstrated that the formation of metapopulations is more complicated; and can be patchy, non-equilibrium and geographical. [11]
She works on both the Californian grasslands and Oregon forest understories. She found that these regions had suffered from climate change, in particular the warmer, drier climate has resulted in a decline in plant community diversity. [2] [12] Species that had functional traits including drought intolerance are particularly vulnerable. In situations where nutrients are the most limiting resource, climate has less of an impact. [2]
Harrison has studied California's wildflowers, which have been shown to be particularly resilient to drought. [13] These wildflowers keep part of their seeds dormant in seed banks underground, which they can disperse when the weather is appropriate. Wildflowers that are more resilient to drought have larger underground seed banks. [14] She has also studied California's wildfires near the Stebbins Cold Canyon Reserve. [15] Almost half of the grasslands studied by Harrison were impacted by the 2015 California wildfires. [15] She has studied the native plant species in the serpentine soils of California with Brian Anacker. [3] [16] [17]
In 2018, Harrison was elected to the National Academy of Sciences. [2] [18] She serves on the scientific advisory board of the Siskiyou County Field Institute. [19] She is a member of the editorial board of the Proceedings of the Royal Society. [20]
Peter Raymond Grant and Barbara Rosemary Grant are a British married couple who are evolutionary biologists at Princeton University. Each currently holds the position of emeritus professor. They are known for their work with Darwin's finches on Daphne Major, one of the Galápagos Islands. Since 1973, the Grants have spent six months of every year capturing, tagging, and taking blood samples from finches on the island. They have worked to show that natural selection can be seen within a single lifetime, or even within a couple of years. Charles Darwin originally thought that natural selection was a long, drawn out process but the Grants have shown that these changes in populations can happen very quickly.
Restoration ecology is the scientific study supporting the practice of ecological restoration, which is the practice of renewing and restoring degraded, damaged, or destroyed ecosystems and habitats in the environment by active human interruption and action. Effective restoration requires an explicit goal or policy, preferably an unambiguous one that is articulated, accepted, and codified. Restoration goals reflect societal choices from among competing policy priorities, but extracting such goals is typically contentious and politically challenging.
Serpentine soil is an uncommon soil type produced by weathered ultramafic rock such as peridotite and its metamorphic derivatives such as serpentinite. More precisely, serpentine soil contains minerals of the serpentine subgroup, especially antigorite, lizardite, and chrysotile or white asbestos, all of which are commonly found in ultramafic rocks. The term "serpentine" is commonly used to refer to both the soil type and the mineral group which forms its parent materials.
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Michael G. Barbour was a notable California botanist and ecologist. He was a Professor Emeritus at the University of California, Davis. His fields of expertise were in autecology and synecology of plants and vegetation in stressful environments, including marine strand, tidal salt marsh, vernal pools, warm desert scrub, mixed evergreen forest, oak forest, and montane conifer forest. This research was conducted in Alta and Baja California along the Pacific coast of North America, on the Gulf of Mexico coast, in northwestern Argentina, in southern Australia, in coastal and arid parts of Israel, in mountains of central-to-northern Spain, in mountains of the Canary Islands, and in mountains of Coast Range and Sierra Nevada of California.
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Allison K. Shaw is an American ecologist and professor at the University of Minnesota. She studies the factors that drive the movements of organisms.
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