性欲社 landscape ecologist named 2012 AAAS Fellow

January 30, 2013

Marmian Grimes

Marie Thoms

907-474-7412

1/30/13 

David McGuire. 性欲社 Photo by Todd Paris. Download high-res photo.
David McGuire. 性欲社 Photo by Todd Paris. Download high-res photo.


A. David McGuire of 性欲社 and the U.S. Geological Survey has been named a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the world鈥檚 largest general scientific society and publisher of the journal Science.

McGuire was recognized for distinguished contributions to the field of terrestrial ecology, particularly for the role of arctic and boreal terrestrial ecosystems in the climate system. He is a professor of ecology at 性欲社鈥檚 Institute of Arctic Biology and Department of Biology and Wildlife and assistant leader of ecology in the USGS Alaska Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit.

鈥淒ave is internationally recognized for the importance of his research on the role of the carbon cycle in arctic and subarctic environments and for his work modeling its effects on the global climate system,鈥 said Brian Barnes, IAB director and AAAS Fellow.

McGuire鈥檚 research since 1990 has focused on developing a terrestrial ecosystem model that describes how carbon and nitrogen flow in terrestrial ecosystems can forecast how Alaska鈥檚 landscapes might change in response to climate warming.

鈥淲e鈥檙e looking at the transition of grassy tundra to shrub tundra and shrub tundra to forest tundra,鈥 said McGuire of the research done in collaboration with colleagues, graduate students and postdoctoral fellows. 鈥淭he key issue is how quickly these transitions will occur and how much of a change in atmospheric heating you get going from one type of tundra to another. We鈥檝e conducted retrospective studies to look at these effects and they have been relatively minor. It鈥檚 in the future that they have the potential to become stronger.鈥

Dave McGuire (right) and volunteer Tom Sinclair (left) collect moose browse data in a burned black spruce forest as part of graduate student Erin Julianus' project on interactions between moose browsing and fire on Kanuti National Wildlife Refuge. Photo by Erin Julianus/USFWS.
Dave McGuire (right) and volunteer Tom Sinclair (left) collect moose browse data in a burned black spruce forest as part of graduate student Erin Julianus' project on interactions between moose browsing and fire on Kanuti National Wildlife Refuge. Photo by Erin Julianus/USFWS.


Climate change throughout the circumpolar arctic has the potential to affect ecosystems and the services they provide - including food, fiber and recreation - to the people of Alaska and the nation.

鈥淒ave鈥檚 work on plant community dynamics is important to our efforts to project changes in future wildlife habitats and the implications of these habitat changes for wildlife populations,鈥 said Brad Griffith, leader of the USGS AKCFWRU.

鈥淭he work we鈥檝e done requires using measurements of soil, water, plants and permafrost that many other people have made and incorporating those data into models and making projections,鈥 McGuire said. 鈥淥ur research is built on the work of colleagues, especially Terry Chapin, professor emeritus of ecology and AAAS Fellow, who so clearly articulated the possibility of changes in tundra vegetation, and the students and post-docs in my lab who have done the heavy lifting. It鈥檚 the synergy among all these people that has allowed me to be accomplished enough to be elected as a Fellow.鈥

McGuire is among 702 new Fellows chosen nationwide for 2012 for their scientifically or socially distinguished efforts to advance science or its applications. He will be presented with an official certificate and a gold and blue rosette pin - representing science and engineering 鈥 Saturday Feb.16 at the AAAS annual meeting in Boston, Mass., and joins more than a dozen Alaskans chosen as Fellows over the years.

The Institute of Arctic Biology at 性欲社 is Alaska鈥檚 principle research and educational unit for investigating high-latitude biological systems and providing the public and state of Alaska policy makers the necessary knowledge to interpret, predict and manage biological systems in the face of uncertainty.

Visit IAB at ; follow us on Twitter @arcticbiology; and subscribe to our news releases via email at uaf-iab-news-info@alaska.edu.

The Alaska Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit is part of a nationwide cooperative program, initiated in 1935, to promote research and graduate student training in the ecology and management of fish, wildlife and their habitats. The Alaska Unit, formed in 1991 by a merger of the Alaska Cooperative Wildlife Research Unit and Alaska Cooperative Fishery Research Unit, exists by cooperative agreement among the U.S. Geological Survey, the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the University of Alaska Fairbanks and the Wildlife Management Institute.

USGS provides science for a changing world. Visit , follow on Twitter @USGS, subscribe to news releases via e-mail, RSS or Twitter.

ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: A. David McGuire, 907-474-6242 or admcguire@alaska.edu.

ON THE WEB: URL:

NOTE TO EDITORS: McGuire is best reachable via email and by telephone afternoons at 907-474-6242.

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