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Dr. Charles D. Canham

Forest Ecologist | PhD, Cornell University

Expertise
forest ecology and management

845 266-3471

Charles Canham studies the dynamics of forest ecosystems and how they respond to a wide range of human impacts. Using field research, novel statistical methods, and computer models, Canham predicts forest response to factors including climate change, introduced pests and pathogens, logging regimes, and air pollution.  

Northeastern forests have been a critical source of carbon sequestration to combat climate change, and can also potentially provide a renewable energy source. Canham and his collaborators have developed methods to assess the tradeoffs between managing forests for carbon sequestration versus biomass energy production to ensure that forest biomass energy is truly carbon neutral.

All of Canham’s work builds on a neighborhood theory of forest dynamics he has developed through research in forests around the world. The theory, and the computer model that encapsulates it (SORTIE-ND), are particularly valuable in his work to explore the development of new forestry that can simultaneously maximize the ecological benefits of species diversity and carbon sequestration and the production of high-value forest products.

In 2020 he published a book, Forests Adrift: Currents Shaping the Future of Northeastern Trees (Yale University Press), which focuses on the future of northeastern forests. His next book will focus on the role of forests in a carbon-neutral, sustainable world.

Canham, Charles D., Nicole Rogers, and Thomas Buchholz. 2013. “Regional Variation in Forest Harvest Regimes in the Northeastern United States”. Ecological Applications 23 (3): 515-22. doi:10.1890/12-0180.1.
Kunstler, Georges, R.B. Allen, David A. Coomes, Charles D. Canham, and Elaine F. Wright. 2013. “Sustainable Management, Earthquake Disturbances, and Transient Dynamics: Modelling Timber Harvesting Impacts in Mixed-Species Forests”. Annals of Forest Science 70 (3): 287-98. doi:10.1007/s13595-012-0256-6.
Liknes, Greg C., Randall S. Morin, and Charles D. Canham. 2013. “Trend Analyses and Projections Using National Forest Inventory Data”. Mathematical and Computation Forestry & Natural-Resource Sciences 5 (2): 112-14.
Haeussler, S., Charles D. Canham, and K.D. Coates. 2013. “Complexity in Temperate Forest Dynamics”. In C. Messier, K. Puettmann, and K. D. Coates (eds.) Managing Forests As Complex Adaptive Systems: Building Resilience to the Challenge of Global Change, 368. New York: Routledge.
Canham, Charles D., and W. McWilliams. 2012. “Information for Forest Process Models: A Review of NRS-FIA Vegetation Measurements”. In Moving from Status to Trends: Forest Inventory and Analysis Symposium. Washington, D.C.: USDA Forest Service. http://www.fs.fed.us/nrs/pubs/gtr/gtr_nrs-p-105.pdf.
McWilliams, W., Charles D. Canham, Randall S. Morin, K. Johnson, P. Roth, and J. A. Westfall. 2012. “Sampling Forest Regeneration across Northern U.S. Forests: Filling a Void in Regeneration Model Input”. In Moving from Status to Trends: Forest Inventory and Analysis Symposium. Washington, D.C.: USDA Forest Service. http://www.fs.fed.us/nrs/pubs/gtr/gtr_nrs-p-105.pdf.
Levine, Carrie R., Raymond J. Winchcombe, Charles D. Canham, Lynn M. Christenson, and Margaret L. Ronsheim. 2012. “Deer Impacts on Seed Banks and Saplings in Eastern New York”. Northeast. Nat. 19: 49-66.
Crowley, Katherine F., B. E. McNeil, Gary M. Lovett, Charles D. Canham, Charles T. Driscoll, Lindsey E. Rustad, E.G. Denny, et al. 2012. “Do Nutrient Limitation Patterns Shift from Nitrogen Toward Phosphorus With Increasing Nitrogen Deposition across the Northeastern United States?”. Ecosystems 15. Springer-Verlag: 940-57. doi:10.1007/s10021-012-9550-2.
Schnurr, Jaclyn L., Richard S. Ostfeld, and Charles D. Canham. 2012. “The Influence of Nearest Seed Neighbors on Seed Removal in Deciduous Forests”. Northeast. Nat. 19: 43-48. doi:10.1656/045.019.0103.
Canham, Charles D., Michael L. Pace, Kathleen C. Weathers, Edward W. McNeil, Barbara L. Bedford, Lora Murphy, and Scott Quinn. 2012. “Nitrogen Deposition and Lake Nitrogen Concentrations: A Regional Analysis of Terrestrial Controls and Aquatic Linkages”. Ecosphere 3 (7). Ecological Society of America: art66. doi:10.1890/ES12-00090.1.