Ecological Society of America Announces 2008 Award Recipients

The Ecological Society of America (ESA) will present societal awards to
eight distinguished ecologists at the 93rd Annual ESA meeting in
Milwaukee, Wisconsin on Monday, August 4, 2008.

Eminent Ecologist Award: Michael Rosenzweig
Michael Rosenzweig of the University of Arizona is the recipient of this
year's Eminent Ecologist Award, given to a senior ecologist in
recognition of an outstanding body of ecological work or sustained
ecological contributions of extraordinary merit. Over his 38-year
career, Rosenzweig has been the discoverer and creator of some of the
seminal concepts in ecological thought, including the stability of
predator-prey dynamics, the relationship between primary production and
evapotranspiration, theories of habitat selection and, perhaps most
importantly, the competitive speciation hypothesis.  His vision of
promoting risky and innovative science led him to establish two
scientific journals, Evolutionary Ecology and Evolutionary Ecology
Research, and become an advocate and spokesperson for the Scholarly
Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition. Rosenzweig served on two
committees of the National Academy of Sciences to develop early warning
indicators of environmental health and identify the most important
challenges in environmental science. Rosenzweig has edited two books and
written three.

MacArthur Award: Monica Turner
Monica Turner of the University of Wisconsin-Madison will receive the
2008 Robert H. MacArthur Award. The MacArthur Award is given biannually
to an established mid-career ecologist for meritorious contributions to
ecology with the expectation of continued outstanding ecological
research. Turner is one of the founders of the discipline of landscape
ecology; her seminal publications on the subject led to the first
comprehensive textbook on the subject in 2001. Her work in Yellowstone
National Park explores the long-term vegetation dynamics in the context
of changing fire regimes, grazing by elk, and the complex interactions
of plant roots, soil, microbes and nitrogen. Turner will be invited to
prepare an address for presentation at the ESA 2009 Annual Meeting and
for publication in the society's flagship journal, Ecology.

Cooper Award: Campbell Webb
Campbell Webb of the Arnold Arboretum at Harvard University will receive
this year's William Skinner Cooper Award for his paper, "Phylogenetics
and community ecology," published in the Annual Review of Ecology and
Systematics in 2002. The Cooper Award is given to honor an outstanding
contribution to the fields of geobotany, physiographic ecology, plant
succession or the distribution of plants along environmental gradients.
In their paper, Webb and coauthors David Ackerly of the University of
California at Berkeley and Mark McPeek of Dartmouth University outlined
methods for integrating evolutionary histories in studies of the
structure, function and evolution of ecological communities. 

Mercer Award: Jonathan Chase 
Jonathan Chase of Washington University in St. Louis will receive this
year's George Mercer Award for his paper, "Drought mediates the
importance of stochastic community assembly," published in Proceedings
of the National Academy of Science in 2007. The Mercer Award is given
for an outstanding recently-published ecological research paper by a
young scientist. Chase's work represents one of the first rigorous tests
of the theory that ecological processes vary widely based on existing
environmental conditions. His paper discusses neutral and niche
partitioning theory and sets a framework for predictive ecological
studies.  

Odum Education Award: Stuart Fisher
This year's Eugene P. Odum Education Award recipient is Stuart Fisher of
Arizona State University. This award recognizes an ecologist for
outstanding work in ecology education. Through teaching, outreach, and
mentoring activities, recipients of this award have demonstrated their
ability to relate basic ecological principles to human affairs.
Fisher's research involves the control of ecosystem structure and
function using desert stream ecosystems as a model, and he routinely
uses real-life and hands-on approaches to train future scientists.  His
attitude of lifelong learning and his dedicated, absorptive mentorship
of graduate and undergraduate students has inspired and fledged some of
the most eminent ecosystem ecologists in the field. 

Distinguished Service Citation: Katherine Gross
Kay Gross of Michigan State University is the director of the Kellogg
Biological Station and is renowned in the ecological community for both
her scientific contributions to plant ecology and her contributions to
developing the institutional infrastructure of the field. The
Distinguished Service Citation recognizes long and distinguished service
to ESA, to the larger scientific community, and to the larger purpose of
ecology in the public welfare. Gross has been involved in the
development of a long-term archive of ecological data that is freely
accessible to ecologists and was instrumental in developing a "think
tank" for ecology, which resulted in the establishment of the National
Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis. 

Sustainability Science Award: Terry Yates and Stuart Chapin 
Terry Yates (posthumously) and Stuart Chapin will receive the 2007 and
2008 Sustainability Science awards, respectively. The award recognizes
research results that provide scientific foundations for sustainable
management, link human and ecological systems and advance sustainability
science. 

In their 2002 BioScience paper, "The ecology and evolutionary history of
an emergent disease: Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome," Yates and his
colleagues apply ecological science to public health and unravel the
linkages between the ecology of the Hantavirus disease and climate
variability, landscape patterns and human behavior. Yates held several
positions at the National Science Foundation and was a vice president of
the University of New Mexico. In December 2007, at the age of 57, Yates
died of brain cancer.

Chapin's winning paper, "Policy strategies to address sustainability of
Alaskan boreal forests in response to a directionally changing climate,"
was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science in
2006. This paper integrates several different sources of theory to
address sustainability in changing social and ecological systems.
Chapin, a professor at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, applied this
framework to climate change impacts in interior Alaska and described
policy strategies that emerged from the analyses.  



-----------------------------
Christine Buckley, Ph.D.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Communications Officer
Ecological Society of America
1990 M St., NW
Suite 700
Washington, DC  20036

phone: 202 833.8773 ext. 211
fax: 202 833.8775

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