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Biogeochemical
Transformation of Energy and Elements
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| Anthropogenic
alteration of biogeochemical processes such as carbon and nitrogen
cycling is thought to be causing a variety of changes to Earth's biosphere.
Faculty at SoMAS are working both on projects designed to produce a
mechanistic understanding of how energy and nutrients are transformed
from one form to another as they pass through marine ecosystems, and
on using that new information to discover approaches to mitigate the
pressing environmental problems that result from human activities.
These projects include studies of the sources, transformations, fates,
and fluxes of various organic and inorganic compounds in both planktonic
and benthic systems, as well as studies of the relationships between
the genetic and physiological diversity of marine microorganisms and
the physical and biological processes that structure their habitats,
including food web interactions. These efforts are focused at scales
ranging from the water quality of a local embayments over seasons
and years, to changes in global climate over years and decades. |

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Diagenetic
Processes
R.
Aller, Lee, Scranton
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Fate
and Transport Processes
Baines,
Brownawell, Cochran,
Fisher, Lee,
Mak, Scranton
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Biodiversity
/ Biocomplexity
J.
Aller, Cerrato, Collier, Gobler, Kemp,
Taylor
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Food
Web Processes
Lonsdale,
Lopez
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Physical
Processes and Modeling
Armstrong, Flagg,
Lwiza, Wilson
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