Professor Of Forest Ecology Named Steimer Professor
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. -- Dr. Marc Abrams, professor of forest ecology and tree physiology in the School of Forest Resources, has been named the Nancy and John Steimer Professor of Agriculture in Penn State's College of Agricultural Sciences.
The professorship was endowed in 1989 to support the acquisition of equipment, scholarly travel, graduate assistants and other activities related to a designated professor's academic program.
"Being awarded this endowed professorship is one of the great honors of my academic career, and I am humbled by that," says Abrams.
He joined the college faculty in 1982. His research program deals with broad-scale temporal and spatial changes in forests of the eastern United States. This has been accomplished using a unique multidisciplinary approach, including the fields of community ecology, disturbance ecology, historical ecology, dendroecology (tree-ring analysis) and tree physiology.
His work focuses on understanding how stresses such as drought, climate change, fire suppression and land-use alter forests. Abrams and his collaborators have contributed significantly to the understanding of how forests in the eastern United States have changed over the last 200 to 300 years and may change in the future. The professorship will provide the opportunity for Abrams to continue his work.
"The endowment will allow me to fund another graduate student in my laboratory,"he says. "I enjoy training graduate students, particularly at the Ph.D. level. I find that to be one of the most stimulating academic activities."
Abrams did forest ecology research and taught during a sabbatical in Japan in 1997. He was the recipient of the Hokkaido Japan Guest Researcher Award.
He received the Charles Bullard Fellowship in 1998 from Harvard University for his research. His work was featured in a story about red maple proliferation in the Eastern Oak forest published in the New York Times in April 1999.
Abrams has served on the editorial board of a number of leading scientific journals including: Ecology and Ecological Monographs, Canadian Journal of Forest Research, Tree Physiology and Trees -- Structure and Function. He presently is serving as a committee member for "State of the Nation's Ecosystems -- Forests" for the H. John Heinz Center for Science, Economics and the Environment.
Abrams received a bachelor's degree in biology in 1976 from State University of New York at Binghamton. He earned his master's degree in forestry from Michigan State University in 1979 and his Ph.D. in forestry from Michigan State University in 1982.
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EDITORS: Marc Abrams can be reached at 814-865-4901.
Contact:
Jeff Mulhollem jjm29@psu.edu 814-863-2719 814-865-1068 fax
