Biofuels and Bioenergy

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Melanie
Colavito
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Degree Program: 
phd
Primary Department/Unit: 
Other Departments or Unit Affiliations: 

My research dissertation research focuses on collaborative and participatory applications of Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and Remote Sensing (R/S) technologies to improve communication and use of scientific knowledge for wildfire planning and management.  I am also a research associate for the Regional Center for Sustainable Economic Development through Arizona Cooperative Extension, where I conduct research to help identify the most sustainable areas for renewable energy development throughout the state using GIS modeling. And I love bicycles

Topic or title of your dissertation/thesis: 

Fire Futures In The Southwest: Using Geospatial Technologies to Bridge The Gap Between Science and Decision-Making [working title]

Advisor(s): 
Expected Graduation Date: 
December, 2012

Leslie Gunatilaka

Leslie
Gunatilaka
Title: 
Professor, School of Natural Resources and the Environment
Additional Titles and Departments: 
Director, Natural Products Center
Professor, Bio5 Institute
Member, AZ Cancer Center
Affiliate Faculty, Institute of the Environment
Related Departments, Schools or Colleges and/or Program(s): 
Education: 
PhD, Chemistry, Imperial College, University of London, UK, 1974.
Phone: 
(520) 621-9932
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Natural products science focusing on innovative strategies for the discovery and development of small-molecule natural products for medicine and agriculture, chemistry and biology of arid land plants and symbiotic microorganisms, biodiversity conservation, plant-fungal interactions, medicinal plants, and application of environmentally-friendly techniques for production of plant biomass and plant secondary metabolites with pharmaceutical potential.

Derek Lemoine

Derek
Lemoine
Title: 
Assistant Professor, Economics
Additional Titles and Departments: 
Affiliate Faculty, Institute of the Environment
Related Departments, Schools or Colleges and/or Program(s): 
Education: 
PhD, University of California Berkeley
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Environmental challenges often couple complex economic and natural systems.  I am interested in statistical methods for formalizing uncertainty about these systems and in economic modeling of decision-making under realistic uncertainty.  Previous research projects have focused on climate change and on transportation systems.

Environmental Themes: 

David Galbraith

David
W
Galbraith
Title: 
Professor, School of Plant Sciences
Additional Titles and Departments: 
Professor, BIO5 Institute
Affiliate Faculty, Institute of the Environment
Related Departments, Schools or Colleges and/or Program(s): 
Education: 
Ph.D., Biochemistry, Cambridge University, 1977.
Phone: 
(520) 621-9153
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Plants comprise the foundation of all living organisms on this planet, a consequence of their exceptional ability to perform photosynthesis. Understanding plants is critical to the survival of the human race, and cytometry has a central role to play in this advancing this understanding. Urgency is increasingly provided given largely uncontrolled growth of the human population, the impact of which is resulting in the ongoing extinction of plant species. My research focuses on the use of cytometry, first,  to examine gene expression according to cell type and at the level of single cells, and, second, as a means to provide a complete molecular census of the angiosperms.

The first research area derives from the observation that land plants generally comprise complex multicellular tissues and organs, within which different cell types are interspersed. Analysis of gene expression requires recognition and separation of these different cell types. We have developed cytometric methods to achieve this separation and analysis, and have extended them to non-plant organisms, including mammals.

The second research area reflects the observation that the flowering plants (angiosperms) comprise approximately 500,000 species, including those that are well described and those that are presumed to exist but have not yet been discovered. We have developed methods of cytometry to rapidly and accurately characterize nuclear DNA contents, but so far, only about 1-2% of the angiosperms have been described in this way. We have therefore proposed a road-map aimed at a complete global census of nuclear DNA contents for the angiosperms, and its extension to cover survey sequencing and, ultimately, complete genomic sequencing.

Advances in scientific technologies have greatly facilitated the acquisition of large datasets of molecular and cellular information, to the extent that the biosciences are no longer limited by the process of data acquisition. Instead, rate-limiting steps are increasingly related to experimental design and sample acquisition and preparation, at the front end, and to data storage, transfer, and analysis, at the back end. Solving these issues will become an increasingly important facet of the scientific endeavor, and we are interested in exploring ways that lead to these solutions.

Maria Reye Sierra-Alvarez

Maria Reye
Sierra-Alvarez
Title: 
Professor, Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering
Education: 
PhD, Environmental Technology, Wageningen University, The Netherlands, 1990
Phone: 
(520) 626-2896
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Bioremediation of hazardous contaminants
Biological treatment of domestic and industrial wastewaters
Microbial-catalyzed transformation of metals and hazardous organic pollutants Environment, health and
safety aspects of semiconductor manufacturing
 

Patricio Valdivia

Patricio
Valdivia
Degree Program: 
phd
Primary Department/Unit: 
Other Departments or Unit Affiliations: 

My interest is the production of biofuels based on microalgae, in a friendly, environmentally and economically sustainable way.

Topic or title of your dissertation/thesis: 

Algae Harvester

Expected Graduation Date: 
December, 2013

Benjamin Blonder

Benjamin
Blonder
Photo of Ben Blonder
Degree Program: 
phd
Primary Department/Unit: 

I am a graduate student in the Enquist lab at the University of Arizona. I am interested in the dynamics and statistical properties of biological networks. I am also interested in improving K-12 science education through experiential approaches.

Topic or title of your dissertation/thesis: 

Venation networks link form and function in plants

Advisor(s): 
Expected Graduation Date: 
May, 2014

Mark C Siemens

Mark
C
Siemens
Title: 
Associate Professor/Specialty Crops Mechanization Specialist, Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering
Education: 
Ph.D., Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering, University of Arizona, 1996.
Phone: 
(928) 782-383
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Responsible for the development and implementation of extension and research programs in the area of specialty crops mechanization. Develops educational materials and works cooperatively with faculty, stakeholder and other U.S. and state agencies. Technologies and systems developed provide applied engineering solutions to problems facing the specialty crop industry.

Donald C Slack

Donald
C
Slack
Title: 
Professor, Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering
Additional Titles and Departments: 
Cecil H. Miller, Jr. and Cecil H. Miller, Sr. Families Dean
Chair for Excellence in Agricultural and Life Sciences
Professor, Watershed Management and Eco-Hydrology, School of Natural Resources
Education: 
Ph.D., Agricultural Engineering and Math Statistics, University of Kentucky, 1975.
Phone: 
(520) 621-7230
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Robert L Smith

Robert
L
Smith
Title: 
Associate Professor, Entomology
Additional Titles and Departments: 
Director, Desert Station for Arthropod Research
Affiliate Faculty, Institute of the Environment
Education: 
Ph.D., Arizona State University
Phone: 
(520) 621-7167
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Robert Smith's fields of basic research interest include evolution of insect reproductive biology with special emphasis on sperm competition, parental investment, and the insect egg. Ongoing research includes the biology of the aquatic Heteroptera and termites. He conducts pragmatic research on structure-infesting termites.

Environmental Themes: 

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