Adrien Finzi

Professor of Biology at Boston University

Schools

  • Boston University

Links

Biography

Boston University

Professor Finzi is interested in the factors regulating productivity and nutrient cycling in terrestrial ecosystems. Research in his lab tends to focus on biogeochemistry and global change in forest ecosystems. His research is primarily field based using observational and experimental approaches. He is particularly interested in how interspecific differences in resource uptake and loss affect the distribution of carbon and nitrogen in terrestrial ecosystems. He is also interested in the interaction between microbial activity and forest dynamics. Thus his perspective is generally integrative, focusing on how the different components of an ecosystem (soils, microbes, plant species) interact with the physical environment to affect biogeochemical cycling.

His interest in global change stems from the fact that human activity is transforming the basic function of the terrestrial biosphere at an accelerating rate. Fossil fuel combustion is increasing the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Fixation of atmospheric N by humans now exceeds the rate of non-anthropogenic N fixation. Changes in land use and the introduction of invasive species have legacy effects on carbon storage and biogeochemical cycling that last decades.

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Cases

How a Common Fungus Is Protecting the Earth from a Climate Change Nightmare

March 14, 2014

NPR “StateImpact” Adrien Finzi, College of Arts & Sciences There is more carbon dioxide stored in the ground than in the air around us. If those all that greenhouse gas escapes, it could be catastrophic for the earth… Expert quote: “If you were to release all of the carbon that’s in soils and put it […]

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Symbiotic Fungi Inhabiting Plant Roots Have Major Impact On Atmospheric Carbon, Scientists Say

January 8, 2014

Science Daily Adrien Finzi, College of Arts & Sciences Microscopic fungi that live in plants’ roots play a major role in the storage and release of carbon from the soil into the atmosphere, according to a University of Texas at Austin researcher and his colleagues at Boston University and the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute… Expert […]

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Plants’ Carbon-Sinking Capacity Is Much Lower Than Thought

October 7, 2012

Scientific American Adrien Finzi, College of Arts & Sciences As carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere continue to climb, most climate models project that the world’s oceans and trees will keep soaking up more than half of the extra CO2… View article

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