People

Michael F. Allen

Director of the Center for Conservation Biology Professor of Plant Pathology and Biology

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Educational Background: Ph.D. Botany, University of Wyoming, 1980
M.S. Botany, University of Wyoming, 1977
B.S. Biology, Southwestern College, KS, 1974

Professional Interests: The ecology of microbial-plant-soil interactions. My interests focus on the regulation of community and ecosystem processes by soil organisms with special emphasis on mycorrhizal fungi. My current research concentrates on global change dynamics and structure of undisturbed areas, and how that information can be utilized in the conservation and restoration of native ecosystems.

Niles Hasselquist

Ph.D. student

Currently, my research focuses on understanding the potential importance that mycorrhizal fungal diversity may have in structuring secondary plant succession in a seasonal tropical forest. In general, I am interested in understanding the ecological significance mycorrhizal fungi may have in determining plant communities.

Einav Myzlish-Gati

Postgraduate Researcher

 

 

Kuni Kitajima

Staff Research Associate

I'm in charge of coordinating lab activities, maintaining equipment and organizing field data for easy access to researchers. My research interests include soil ecology, functional and physiological mycology, and ecological modeling.

Laurel Salzman

Ph.D. student

Picture of Laurel Salzman

I am broadly interested in ecosystem conservation and restoration. Based in the Yucatan Peninsula, I wish to better understand how tropical ecosystems recover after anthropogenic disturbances. Epiphytes, a specialized group of organisms occupying a niche in the canopy, are considered to be especially sensitive to such disturbances. My research is currently focused on determining those factors that are critical for epiphyte establishment. Which mechanisms govern epiphyte return to previously disturbed tropical areas?

Hector Estrada Medina

Graduate Student in Environmental Sciences

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I am interested in the study of water dynamics in the semitropical karstic environment of the Yucatan Peninsula. I want to focus my researching thesis Dissertation on building a water balance model and quantifying the magnitude of the fluxes of the different components (atmosphere, soil, rock, biota and ground water).

Specific subcomponents will be studied in detail to find out their roll on the water dynamics (i.e., within the biota component: water uptake differences according with vegetation strata, water holding plant strategies, and importance of the Mycorrhiza).

Ayesha Sirajuddin

Ph.D. student return to the top

Boyce Hall 2407 University Lab Building 203
University of California Riverside, CA 92521 (951)-827-4227 (951)-827-6314
Center for Conservation Biology Email the Allen Lab