Ecohydrology & Informatics: Seeing the Water in the Trees

Naomi goes to University of Arizona to give the  2016 Chester C. Kisiel Memorial Lecture Kisiel Memorial Lecture http://www.hwr.arizona.edu/chester-c-kisiel-memorial-lecture Abstract One of the goals of eco-hydrology is to be able to estimate how much water plants use.  Plant water use often comprises a substantial fraction of the water budget, influencing water flux to the atmosphere, rechargeContinue reading “Ecohydrology & Informatics: Seeing the Water in the Trees”

Aspen isn’t just Aspen – evidence of adaptation of species to regional climate

New publication in Ecology and Evolution, “Populations of aspen (Populus tremuloides Michx.) with different evolutionary histories differ in their climate occupancy“. Greer, B. T., Still, C., Howe, G. T., Tague, C. and Roberts, D. A. (2016), Populations of aspen (Populus tremuloides Michx.) with different evolutionary histories differ in their climate occupancy. Ecol Evol. doi:10.1002/ece3.2102

New publication

Naomi Tague is a co-author on new publication in Geography Compass titled “Social Science/Natural Science Perspectives on Wildfire and Climate Change“. Citation: Ayres, A., Degolia, A., Fienup, M., Kim, Y., Sainz, J., Urbisci, L., Viana, D., Wesolowski, G., Plantinga, A. J., and Tague, C. (2016) Social Science/Natural Science Perspectives on Wildfire and Climate Change. GeographyContinue reading “New publication”

Heckman part of Graduate Research Advocacy Day

Tague Team Lab PhD student Chris Heckman participated in Graduate Research Advocacy Day in Sacramento on March 16th, 2016. Chris was selected as a UCSB advocate to educate lawmakers about the importance of graduate research and its contribution to California’s economy and progress. Chris was able present his research on “Managing forests in an era of drought”Continue reading “Heckman part of Graduate Research Advocacy Day”