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I’m an Associate Professor of Plant
Biology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. After completing
my B.A. at Oxford University, I did my doctoral dissertation research at
Cambridge University with field work in montane forest in Jamaica. In 1992 I
moved to the Smithsonian Tropical Research
Institute in Panama and was based at the
Barro Colorado Island
research station until I arrived in Urbana in 2000.
My research is in the community
ecology of tropical trees, with a particular interest in understanding
processes that determine the abundance and distribution patterns of pioneer
species. Some of my current projects look at:
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seed dispersal, seed germination
and the importance of recruitment limitation to pioneer regeneration
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importance of fungal pathogens in
the dynamics of soil seed banks
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the role of herbivores in shaping
the local distribution of pioneers in relation to light, and
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role of edaphic factors
influencing forest structure and dynamics.
Much of my work is based in Panama,
and at large permanent forest plots throughout the tropics coordinated by
the Center for Tropical Forest Science. |