Peter L. Marks

GRADUATE STUDENTS

Name

Dissertation Title

Year

Present Position
W. H. Schlesinger Biogeochemical limits on two levels of plant community organization inthe cypress forest of Okefenokee Swamp 1976 James B. Duke Professor, Departments of Botany, Duke University and Geology, Duke University
C. L. Mohler* An analysis of floodplain vegetation of the lower Neches drainage, south-east Texas, with some considerations on the use of regression and correlation in plant synecology 1979 Senior Research Associate, Crop & Soil Sciences, Cornell University
R. E. Furnas A resource theory of self-thinning in plant populations 1981 Director, Microcomputer Power, Ithaca, New York
F. E. Putz** Natural history of lianas and their influences on tropical forest dynamics 1982 Professor, Department of Botany, University of Florida
L. F. Huenneke* The population ecology of a clonal shrub, Alnus incana ssp. rugosa, in central New York 1983 Professor, Department of Biology, New Mexico State University
C. D. Canham* Canopy recruitment in shade tolerant trees: the response of Acer saccharum and Fagus grandifolia to canopy openings 1984 Scientist, Institute for Ecosystem Studies, Millbrook, New York
D. S. Gill Woody plant colonization of old fields in central New York 1987 .
N. L. Ostman Senescent death in jack pine (Pinus banksiana Lamb.): a comparison of the biomass allocation patterns for senescent and non-senescent trees 1987 Natural Areas Coordinator, Cornell Plantations
N. L. Stephenson* Climatic control of vegetation distribution: the role of the water balance with examples from North America and Sequoia National Park 1988 Research Ecologist, Western Ecological Research Center, USGS
S. Gardescu Seedling establishment of sugar maple in forests in Tompkins County, New York: effects of herbivory, disease, and understory plants 1990 Research Associate, Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University
L. L. Jackson* Life history consequences of greater seed production in a perennial grass, Tripsacum dactyloides: a comparison of high and low seed-yielding genotypes 1990 Associate Professor, Department of Biology University of Northern Iowa
J. D. Chinea Rivera Invasion dynamics of the exotic legume tree Albizia procera (Roxb.) Benth. in Puerto Rico 1992 Assistant Professor, Depto. de Biologia, Univ. de Puerto Rico
M. B. Dias Filho Ecophysiological studies of four Amazonian weedy species: Implications for their invasive potential 1994 Staff Scientist, EMBRAPA-CPATU, Brazil
M. E. Stover Influences of land use on succession on former agricultural land in Tompkins County, New York (M. S. degree) 1994 Naturalist, Locust Grove Nature Center, Cabin John Regional Park, MD
M. D. Corbit Hedgerows as habitat corridors for forest herbs in central New York (USA) (M. S. degree) 1995 Communication Manager, Theory Center, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY
T. A. Singleton Recovery of the forest herb community in post-agricultural forests in central New York: Pattern and Process 1998 Assistant Professor, Department of Biology, Franklin Pierce College
E. F. Latty Interactions between land-use history, nitrogren cycling, and beech bark disease in northern hardwood forests 2001 Assistant Professor, Department of Biology, Hollins College
M. Vellend Species diversity and genetic diversity: parallel processes and correlated patterns 2004 Post-doctoral Fellow, National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis

* NSF Predoctoral Fellow

** Smithsonian Predoctoral Fellow


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11/03/04