Controls on Bacterial Activity

My dissertation research focuses on microbial ecology in arctic lakes and streams to study the relationship between biodiveristy and ecosystem function. I am currently at the University of Michigan, in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, working with George Kling.  This research is conducted at Toolik Field Station in collaboration with Byron Crump of Horn Point Laboratory (HPL-UMCES) and the Arctic Long-term Ecological Research (ARC-LTER) group.  My dissertation committee members also include Deborah Goldberg, Don Zak, and Paul Dunlap of the University of Michigan.

My dissertation focuses on four controls of bacterial activity and examines their mechanisms and interactions.

Research questions that I have examined include:

Community composition is analyzed using denaturant gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) in collaboration with Byron Crump at the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science at the Horn Point Laboratory. 

Funding for my research has been provided by:

Top photos: Jen Kostrzewski sampling Toolik Lake, Heather Adams and Alex Mettler at Lake I-8, and Jessica Spence setting up transplant experiments at the Lake I-8 inlet.

Bottom photo: Lake I-8, upstream from Toolik Lake, as seen from helicopter.