As part of a multi-year, multi-institution partnership with the USDA 
Forest Service, Michigan State University (MSU) is taking a leadership 
role in tree biomass equation development in the North Central region of 
the country.  The nationwide forest inventory conducted by the U.S. 
Department of Agriculture’s Forest Inventory and Analysis (FIA) Program 
provides estimates of changes in the nation’s forest biomass and carbon 
stocks, extrapolated from a national network of forest monitoring plots. 
Biomass equations are used to translate measurements of trees on FIA plots 
into estimates of nationwide forest carbon stocks, but the currently 
available national biomass equations are inaccurate or have unknown 
accuracy and do not reflect the diversity of trees and forests in 
America’s landscapes.  The FIA program has launched a national-scale 
effort to obtain regionally-representative data to develop new tree 
biomass equations for the nation.  The data will be used to developed new 
tree models for predicting forest biomass and carbon nationwide.

Dr. David MacFarlane, a professor of forest measurements and modeling at 
MSU, is seeking a graduate research assistant interested in working with 
him on this project.  The work will include both field and laboratory 
measurements of trees and developing new tree models in a statistical 
computing environment. The research assistantship will be available 
starting August 15th, 2014, but start date is negotiable.  Please contact 
him if you are interested (see below):

Prof. David W. MacFarlane
Director of Undergraduate Studies &
Forest Measurements and Modeling Laboratory
Department of Forestry
Michigan State University
East Lansing, MI 48824, USA
phone: 1-517-355-2399
[email protected]

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