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CONTACT:
Mario Aguilera
or Cindy Clark
,
(858) 534-3624
August 1, 2000
SCRIPPS
SCIENTISTS HONORED WITH PRESTIGIOUS COOPER ECOLOGY AWARD
2000
award is a first for research in an oceanic system
Marking a first for research in an oceanic system, the William
S. Cooper Award has been given to Paul K. Dayton, Mia J. Tegner, Peter
B. Edwards, and Kristin L. Riser of Scripps Institution of Oceanography
at the University of California, San Diego, for their investigation of
one of Earth's largest underwater kelp forests.
The Cooper Award is awarded to outstanding contributors to the fields of
geobotany and/or physiographic ecology. The Scripps co-authors
were honored for their paper, "Temporal and spatial scales of kelp
demography: the role of oceanic climate," which was published in
the May 1999 issue of Ecological Monographs. They will be honored
Aug. 9 at a ceremony in Snowbird, Utah.
"These four researchers at Scripps Institution of
Oceanography were able to address fundamental questions about
sustainability of communities in the face of disturbance along
environmental gradients," the Ecological Society of America noted
in announcing the 2000 award.
The Cooper Award Subcommittee members were impressed with the extent to
which the researchers were able to extend analyses commonly used in
terrestrial systems to the kelp forest community off Point Loma, San
Diego, Calif. The committee noted that the Scripps paper is in keeping
with the tradition of recent award winners in that it has large
quantities of data from a system where data is difficult to obtain,
synthesizes experimental and descriptive studies, and addresses
fundamental questions.
Their research evaluated the roles of large-scale, low frequency
oceanographic processes on the demography patterns of kelp. The
processes ranged from seasonal climate variability to nutrient-poor El
Niño events and nutrient-rich La Niñas.
"Standard experiments of the type that ecologists often do at small
scales give different results under different oceanographic
conditions," said Dayton. "As expected, we found considerable
differences in the habitat adaptations of the specific kelps over large
temporal and spatial scales. By doing small-scale experiments over large
scales, researchers can gain a much more realistic understanding of
oceanic ecosystems."
One noted finding from the paper is that the diversity of the system is
maintained by continuous fluctuation in the oceanographic climate.
Dayton is a professor of oceanography; Tegner is a research biologist;
and Riser is a staff research associate. All are in Scripps¹s Marine
Life Research Group. Edwards, who is retired, was a staff research
associate who spent nearly 10 years on this project.
The research was sponsored by the National Science Foundation, the City
of San Diego, the California Sea Grant College Program, the Pew
Charitable Trusts, and the Marine Life Research Group at Scripps.
Scripps Institution of Oceanography, a part of the University of
California, San Diego, is one of the oldest, largest, and most important
centers for global science research and graduate training in the world.
In 1995, the National Research Council ranked Scripps Institution first
in faculty quality among oceanography programs nationwide. The
scientific scope of the institution has grown since its founding in 1903
to include biological, physical, chemical, geological, geophysical, and
atmospheric studies of the earth as a system. More than 300
research programs are under way today in a wide range of scientific
areas. The institution has a staff of about 1,200, and annual
expenditures of approximately $100 million, from federal, state, and
private sources. Scripps operates the largest academic fleet with four
oceanographic research ships for worldwide exploration and one research
platform.
Scripps
Institution of Oceanography on the web: www.sio.ucsd.edu/
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