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Dr. Peter M. Groffman

Microbial Ecologist | PhD, University of Georgia

Expertise
soil ecology, water quality

845 677-7600 x128

Peter Groffman studies how microbial processes impact gas exchange - particularly nitrogen - between the soil and air. His work encompasses rural and urban ecosystems, and is primarily centered at two of the National Science Foundation’s Long Term Ecological Research sites located in Hubbard Brook, New Hampshire and Baltimore, Maryland.

As a result of climate change, forests in the northeastern US are experiencing reduced winter snow cover. This change leaves the forest soil exposed to subfreezing temperatures for extended periods. Without a layer of insulating snow, important biological activity that usually continues throughout the winter stops. Freezing damages tender tree roots. Increased winter rain washes nitrogen and phosphorus - nutrients critical to tree growth - out of the soil, threatening forest productivity and water quality. Bare soils produce more nitrous oxide and consume less methane - both potent greenhouse gases. Understanding these processes will inform forest management as climate warms.

Urbanization is a global trend marked by increasing homogenization of the landscape; imagine the cookie cutter properties that characterize ‘suburbia’. Understanding landscape homogenization will help predict the impacts of urban land use change and its effects on carbon storage and nitrogen pollution, on multiple spatial scales.

Groffman is also a Professor at the City University of New York Advanced Science Research Center at the Graduate Center and the Brooklyn College Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences.

Groffman, Peter M., M.A. Altabet, J.K. Böhlke, K. Butterbach-Bahl, M.B. David, M.K. Firestone, A. E. Giblin, T.M. Kana, L.P. Nielsen, and M.A. Voytek. 2006. “Methods for Measuring Denitrification: Diverse Approaches to a Difficult Problem”. Ecol. Appl. 16: 2091-2122. http://www.caryinstitute.org/reprints/Groffman_et_al_Methods_denitrification_Ecol_Appl.pdf.
Jacinthe, P.A., and Peter M. Groffman. 2006. “Microbial Nitrogen Cycling Processes in a Sulfidic Coastal Marsh”. Wetl. Ecol. Manage 14: 123-31.
Groffman, Peter M., Melany C. Fisk, Charles T. Driscoll, Gene E. Likens, Timothy J. Fahey, C. Eagar, and Linda H. Pardo. 2006. “Calcium Additions and Microbial Nitrogen Cycle Processes in a Northern Hardwood Forest”. Ecosystems 9: 1289-1305. http://www.caryinstitute.org/reprints/Groffman_et_al_2006_Calcium_Additions_Ecosystems.pdf.
Suárez, Esteban R., Timothy J. Fahey, Joseph B. Yavitt, Peter M. Groffman, and Patrick J. Bohlen. 2006. “Patterns of Litter Disappearance in a Northern Hardwood Forest Invaded by Exotic Earthworms”. Ecol. Appl. 16: 154-65.
Hale, R., and Peter M. Groffman. 2006. “Chloride Effects on Nitrogen Dynamics in Forested and Suburban Stream Debris Dams”. J. Environ. Qual. 35: 2425-32.
Pardo, Linda H., Pamela H. Templer, Christine L. Goodale, S. Duke, Peter M. Groffman, and Gary M. Lovett. 2006. “Regional Assessment of N Saturation Using Foliar and Root Delta N-15”. Biogeochemistry 80: 143-71.
Gutiérrez, Jorge L., Clive G. Jones, Peter M. Groffman, Stuart E. G. Findlay, O.O. Iribarne, P.D. Ribiero, and C.M. Bruschetti. 2006. “The Contribution of Crab Burrow Excavation to Carbon Availability in Surficial Salt-Marsh Sediments”. Ecosystems 9: 647-58. http://www.caryinstitute.org/reprints/Gutierrez_et_al_2006_Contribution_Ecosystems.pdf.
Groffman, Peter M., R.T. Venterea, L. V. Verchot, and C.S. Potter. 2006. “Landscape and Regional Scale Studies of Nitrogen Gas Fluxes”. In J. Wu, K. B. Jones, H. Li, and O. L. Loucks (eds.). Scaling and Uncertainty Analysis in Ecology: Methods and Applications, 191-203. Springer, New York.
Groffman, Peter M., J.P. Hardy, Charles T. Driscoll, and Timothy J. Fahey. 2006. “Snow Depth, Soil Freezing and Trace Gas Fluxes in a Northern Hardwood Forest”. Global Change Biol. 12: 1748-60. http://www.caryinstitute.org/reprints/Groffman_et_al_2006_Snow_Depth_Global_Change_Biology.pdf.
Kaye, J. P., Peter M. Groffman, Nancy B Grimm, L.A. Baker, and Richard V. Pouyat. 2006. “A Distinct Urban Biogeochemistry?”. Trends Res. Ecol. Evol. 21: 192-99.