Dr. Laurel Salton Clark Memorial
Graduate Fellowship Award Recipients
2012-2013
 |
Alexis Santos
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Research Title: Variability of Nutrient Induction on Surface Tracers in the North Atlantic
Synopsis: In situ observations and model output will be used with hindcast modeling to determine the mechanism behind variability in physics of nutrient induction on biogeochemistry in the North Atlantic Ocean. |
2012-2012
 |
Darren Pilcher
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Research Title: The Carbon Cycle of Lake Michigan
Synopsis: A coupled physical and biological 3-D model will be applied to Lake Michigan to quantify the carbon budget and assess the impacts of invasive Dreissena mussel species and lake acidification. |
2010-2011
 |
Shawn Serbin
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Research Title: Quantifying the variation in light-use efficiency of forest ecosystems
Synopsis: This project utilizes mutli-sensor image data to upscale and quantify light-use efficiency, a key component in remote sensing of terrestrial productivity, based on characteristics of the vegetation. |
2009-2010
 |
Paul West
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Research Title: The Effects of Agricultural Production on Carbon Storage and
Water Balance: Quantifying the Global Patterns and Tradeoffs
Synopsis: This research uses crop data and ecosystem models to quantify the
global patterns of the tradeoffs between the ecosystem services of crop
production, water availability, and carbon storage.
|
2008-2009
David Zaks
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Research Title: No Free Lunch: Trading Away Ecosystem Services from
Agriculture in the Brazilian Amazon
Synopsis: This research combines commodity production data, global trade
data, and ecosystem models to quantify the embodied resources within
agricultural commodities in the Brazilian Amazon and their distribution around
the world.
2007-2008
Jonathan Van Dyke
Medical College of Wisconsin
Research Title: Optimizing Stretch for Maximal JNK Activation: A
Countermeasure Against Central Corelike Lesion and Muscle Atrophy in Mice
Synopsis: It is my goal to provide the ground work for future studies
leading to muscle atrophy prevention in humans by characterizing and optimizing
JNK activation in response to varying durations of daily passive stretch in a
mouse model.