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Name: Kloeppel, Brian
Telephone: 828.524.2128 x127; Fax: 828.369.6768
Email: kloeppel@uga.edu
Organization:
Institute of Ecology
University of Georgia
Coweeta Hydrologic Laboratory
3160 Coweeta Lab Road
Otto, North Carolina 28763
Position at Coweeta LTER: Principal Investigator
Specialty: Forest Processes
Habitat: Forest
Organism: Plants
Core Area(s): Primary Production (1)
Education:
B.S., University of Wisconsin - Madison, Forest Science, 1989
M.S., Pennsylvania State University, Tree Physiology, 1992
Ph.D., University of Wisconsin – Madison, Forest Ecology, 1998
Appointments:
Assistant Research Scientist, University of Georgia, 2000-present
Program Coordinator, University of Georgia, 1995-2000
Graduate Research and Teaching Assistant, University of Wisconsin
-Madison, 1992-1995
Graduate Research and Teaching Assistant, Pennsylvania State University,
1990-1991
Associate Research Specialist, University of Wisconsin – Madison,
1989-1990
Publications (Five as examples of research foci):
Kloeppel, B.D., S.T. Gower, J.G. Vogel, and P.B. Reich. 2000. Diurnal,
seasonal, and edaphic limitations on the foliar gas exchange of Larix
occidentalis and sympatric evergreen conifers in western Montana.
Functional Ecology 14:281-292.
Kloeppel, B.D., S.T. Gower, I.W. Treichel, and S. Kharuk. 1998. Foliar
carbon isotope discrimination in Larix species and sympatric evergreen
conifers: a global comparison. Oecologia 114:153-159.
Martin, J.G., B.D. Kloeppel, T.L. Schaefer, D.L. Kimbler, and S.G.
McNulty. 1998. Aboveground biomass and nitrogen allocation of ten
deciduous southern Appalachian tree species. Canadian Journal of Forest
Research 28:1648-1659.
Kloeppel, B.D. and M.D. Abrams. 1995. Ecophysiological attributes of the
native Acer saccharum and the exotic Acer platanoides in urban oak
forests in Pennsylvania, USA. Tree Physiology 15:739-746.
Reich, P.B, B.D. Kloeppel, D.S. Ellsworth, and M.B. Walters. 1995. Unique
photosynthesis-nitrogen relations in different hardwood and evergreen
coniferous tree species. Oecologia 104:24-30.
Synergistic Activities:
In addition to my research and administrative responsibilities, I have
led the Coweeta LTER Schoolyard Education Initiative over the last four
years that links scholarly research with outreach and education at the
6th grade, high school, and community college levels. These students
learn about the research techniques and our research findings while
participating in group research data collection and summary.
I have also served as Coweeta's representative to the Organization of
Biological Field Stations (OBFS) since 1997. This organization seeks to
link field stations, researchers, and students with opportunities for
collaboration and further field study. In addition, it helps to link
research sites with similar administrative challenges to provide creative
solutions for infrastructure, research, and educational development. |