Ecological and evolutionary processes
It is well known that ecological processes are relevant to biodiversity conservation because they create ecological conditions necessary for resilience, persistence and the prevention of thresholds and irreversible changes in ecosystems. What is still needed, however, is an understanding of which ecological and evolutionary processes are important for achieving these aims, how sensitive they are to environmental changes over short and long time-scales and how to devise policies to conserve them.
Browse projects by theme
- Long-term Ecology Lab
- Resilience of Semi-Arid Socio-Ecological Systems
- Taxonomy and Systematics
- Resilience of Coastal Peat Swamp Forests
- PaleoPNL: Testing the Progressive Nitrogen Limitaton Hypothesis
- Landscape Planning for the Future
- Eurasian Arctic Greening, Large Scale Climate, and the Potential for Novel Ecosystems