Soil ecological responses to climate warming, wildfires and drought

College of Science Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology (EEB)

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Gallery Flyer

When

3 – 4 p.m., Nov. 18, 2024

Where

Environment and Natural Resources 2 Building, Room S107
1064 E. Lowell St., Tucson, AZ 85719

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Presenter Details

Rachel Gallery, PhD
Associate Professor and Associate Director, School of Natural Resources and the Environment, College of Agriculture and Life Sciences
University of Arizona
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Gallery is a professor of microbial ecology in the School of Natural Resources and the Environment and director of the Thomas E. Lovejoy Center for Bridging Biodiversity, Conservation Science, and Policy in the Arizona Institute for Resilience at the University of Arizona.

Event Description

Abstract: The twin crises of climate change and biodiversity loss are among the world’s most urgent challenges, and they are interconnected. Alpine wetlands, mid-elevation forests and desert grasslands—critical ecosystems for biodiversity and carbon storage—face escalating threats from climate warming, wildfires and drought. What are the ecosystem consequences of these stressors? Gallery will present findings from climate warming experiments in the Andean alpine wetlands (páramo), wildfires in Southwestern U.S. forests and drought simulations in the Sonoran Desert, focusing on the responses of plant and soil microbe communities.

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