Biogeochemistry and Ecosystem Science

Cornell has a long and distinguished history in the fields of biogeochemistry and ecosystem science. These fields of science strive to understand basic mechanistic processes at scales from within ecosystems to the entire globe and provide a framework for investigating aspects of human-accelerated environmental change, including climate change, acid deposition, eutrophication, land-use change, the impacts of invasive species, and loss of native biodiversity. Understanding biogeochemical and ecosystem processes often requires integration of such diverse disciplines as community and population ecology, hydrology, agronomy, forestry, limnology, oceanography, soil sciences, atmospheric sciences, and resource economics.

The Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology (EEB) has particular strengths in the study of hydrologic and atmospheric exchanges of nitrogen with terrestrial ecosystems, regional carbon dynamics, the global methane cycle, coastal eutrophication issues including the interaction of human activities and climate change on the flux of nutrients from large regions and river basins, and the influence of organism assemblages on the biogeochemistry of aquatic ecosystems. Because many biogeochemical and ecosystem science questions are inherently multidisciplinary, biogeochemical research at Cornell interfaces heavily with other research areas within the department and with other departments at Cornell. Thirty-five faculty members across eight departments and three colleges (Biological and Environmental Engineering, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Crop and Soil Sciences, Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, EEB, Horticulture, Microbiology, Natural Resources) have significant research and teaching interests in biogeochemistry.

Related people

Image of Christine L Goodale
Christine L Goodale

Frank H.T. Rhodes Professor of Environmental Science

Image of Meredith Holgerson
Meredith Holgerson

Associate Professor

Image of Benjamin Houlton
Benjamin Houlton

Professor Ronald P. Lynch Dean of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences

Image of Robert Warren Howarth
Robert Warren Howarth

David R. Atkinson Professor of Ecology and Environmental Biology

Image of Andrés López-Sepulcre
Andrés López-Sepulcre

Assistant Professor

Image of Peter McIntyre
Peter McIntyre

Associate Professor Dwight Webster Sesquicentennial Faculty Fellow

Image of Jed P. Sparks
Jed P. Sparks

Professor

Image of Xiangtao Xu
Xiangtao Xu

Associate Professor

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Accelerator Physics    Aesthetics & Media Studies    Algebra    Analysis    Analytical    Applied Mathematics    Astrophysics, General Relativity and Cosmology    Atmospheric Spectral Signatures    Bangla    Biogeochemistry and Ecosystem Science    Bioinorganic    Biological Physics    Biology Education Research    Bioorganic    Biophysical    Black Holes and Neutron Stars    Burmese    Chemical Biology    Chinese (Mandarin)    Cognition    Combinatorics and Discrete Geometry    Community and Urban Sociology    Community Ecology and Population Biology    Comparative and World Literature    Comparative Media Studies    Computational Social Science    Cosmology and the Distant Universe    Critical Studies of Race, Gender & Sexuality    Critical Studies of Race, Gender, and Sexuality    Critical Theory    Culture    Development    Disks and Jets    Early Modern Studies    Economy and Society    Engaging With Life on Earth    Evolutionary Patterns and Processes    Experimental Condensed Matter Physics    Experimental Elementary Particle Physics    Extreme Physics and Astrophysics of Compact Objects    Galaxies Across the Universe    Gender    Geometry    Habitable Environments    Hindi-Urdu    Indonesian    Inequality and Social Stratification    Inorganic    Intimate Organismal Interactions and Chemical Ecology    Japanese   
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