Associate Professor
About
Other Positions
Associate Professor, Integrative Biology, University of Texas at Austin (since 2021)
Academic background
Ph.D. University of California, Berkeley, Energy and Resources, December 2004
M.S. University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, Physics, 1999
AB Columbia University, Physics, 1994
Research Areas
- Community ecology and theoretical ecology
Graduate students
Postdocs
Research interests
Biodiversity in nature can be puzzlingly high in the light of competition between species, which arguably should eventually result in a single winner. The coexistence mechanisms that allow for this biodiversity shape the dynamics of communities and ecosystems. My research focuses on understanding the mechanisms of competitive coexistence, how competition influences community structure and diversity, and what insights observed patterns of community structure might provide about competitive coexistence.
Theory development and modeling dominate in the approaches I take to my research, but I have a particular interest in tightening linkages between theoretical and empirical work, and increasingly my lab is carrying out data analyses as well. A good portion of my theoretical work is broadly applicable, but I am also interested in the coexistence of tree species in forests. Broad theory can only take us so far in determining the coexistence dynamics actually at play in nature. Developing and testing system-specific theory must play a role as well. Forests play a large role in the global carbon cycle, and have high data availability due to a global network of forest census sites. The high diversity of tropical forests is an especially exciting puzzle.
Specific themes that have been a focus of my work include 1) further developing our fundamental understanding of the nature of “niche differences”, i.e. differences between species that lessen competition and stabilize their coexistence; 2) improving our ability to use “neutral theory”, which encapsulates the alternative idea that species coexist through equal abilities, and hence communities are structured by chance, to build process-based null models for detecting the influence of niche differentiation; 3) studying “stochastic niche” models, in which both chance events and species differences are at play, especially in regards to their trait pattern predictions, and uncovering support for those predictions in a tropical forest; and 4) developing a deeper understanding of, and better methods for quantifying the influence of, two key niche differentiation mechanisms that may play a major role in tree species coexistence: successional niche differentiation and differences in enemies.
Additional research interests of mine outside competitive coexistence include macroecological scaling patterns, such as the species-area relationship and related patterns, and their use to estimate diversity loss from habitat destruction and fragmentation, and the influence of large-scale biodiversity loss on ecosystem function (existing work has focused on small scale biodiversity).