Views
- Info
Wootton Lab
by
admin
—
last modified
Dec 08, 2010 03:25 PM
Lab of Tim Wootton at the University of Chicago, Department
of Ecology and Evolution, including research on Tatoosh Island,
Washington.

|
J. Timothy Wootton
Dept. Ecology & Evolution
The University of Chicago
twootton@uchicago.edu
|

That's a pen cap, not a
cigarette!
|
My
research focuses on the ecological and evolutionary consequences of
interactions among organisms. My work centers on how multi-species
systems function and on evaluating methods that might predict how such
systems will respond to environmental change, particularly in regard to
the current epidemic of species extinctions and introductions occurring
throughout the world. I have conducted research on a wide variety of
related subjects and retain active research interests in most of them,
including the role of ecological factors on the evolution of life
history and mating systems, and population viability models of
endangered species. I work in several different systems, and
study a range of taxa. My general approach develops and tests questions
or models of broad theoretical interest, using field experiments,
observations of large-scale species introductions, and between-system
comparisons. Currently, my research focuses on rocky intertidal marine
communities (particularly on Tatoosh Island, Washington) and rivers,
which serve as model experimental systems for
ecology. Specific research includes:
|
Indirect
Effects of Environmental Impacts.
Studying indirect effects of environmental impacts, such as species
extinctions and introductions, changes in productivity, and changes in
disturbance regime, on complex ecosystems.
|

|
Interaction
Strengths.
Identifying observational and experimental approaches that predict the
strength of species interactions in natural communities.
Parameterizing dynamic models of food webs.
|

|
|

|
|

|
Extinction
Risk.
Exploring experimentally the importance of genetic and
demographic factors on extinction risk in small populations.
Population viability.
|

|
River
Food Web Ecology.
Studying whole-ecosystem response to large-scale impacts or management
programs derived by focusing on single species, particularly in streams
in Costa Rica and salmon-bearing rivers of western North America.
|

|
Ecology
and Evolution of Invasive Species.
Species impacts in native and introduced habitats, character
displacement, and life history change following invasion by House
Finches and other species.
|

|
 |
|
|
PEOPLE IN THE LAB
|
|
|
I
expect my students to develop a broad perspective on ecology and
evolution, to engage in research rooted solidly in empiricism but with
an eye toward its wider theoretical and practical implications, and to
maintain a healthy knowledge of natural history. I particularly
encourage applications from students with interests in marine or
aquatic ecology.
Past and current students and
post-docs in the lab have studied a variety of topics loosely related
to my conceptual interests. These include:
Aaron Kandur: Determinants of range limits
at multiple scales. Use of neural networks to characterize
community interactions.
Will Tyburczy:
Effects of discordant time-scales on ecological dynamics.
Kristen Jenkins:
Palaeoecological perspectives on environmental change.
Jon Chase: Size
structured interactions and alternative stable states in pond food webs
along a productivity gradient.
Jean Tsao: Lyme disease dynamics and
management in an ecological community context.
Amy Downing: Experimental studies of
biodiversity and ecosystem function in multi-trophic pond ecosystems.
Kevin Britton-Simmons: Population dynamics and
community impacts of an invasive brown algae, Sargassum muticum,
in Puget Sound.
Pamela Geddes: Impacts and mechanisms of action of
dissolved organic carbon derived from external leaf subsidies in pond
ecosystems.
Doug Nutter: Multi-trophic species-area relationships,
and the effects of disturbance and stress in experimental tidepool
communities.
Lis Nelis:
Food-web consequences of species invasions, particularly the
synergistic interactions of multiple invaders on a remote
Chilean
island.
Mark Novak:
Interaction strength estimates and impacts of omnivory in New Zealand
intertidal communities along a productivity gradient.
Michael Fitzsimons: Feedback and species
coexistence of mycorrhizae and plants in prairies.
POST-DOCTORAL FELLOWS/RESEARCH
ASSOCIATES
|
Handojo Kusumo:
Genetic structure and dynamics of experimental kelp populations.
Microsatellite and AFLP methods.
James
Forester (post-doc in the Center for Integrating Statistics
and the Environmental Sciences [CISES]):
Landscape ecology of elk-wolf-habitat interactions. Methods for
parameterizing multi-species models from community dynamics data.
Analysis of spatial association. Models of movent in juvenile salmon.
Dylan Maddox:
Ecological/evolutionary consequences of avian invasion. Dynamic
macroecology.
Matthew Helmus (NSF
Bioinformatics post-doc): Phylogenetic signals in interaction
strength and food web structure.
|

|
LINKS
|

|
My laboratory is strongly integrated with that of my
colleague, Dr. Cathy
Pfister and I am actively involved as a committee member or
co-advisor with most of her students.
See a MOVIE
CLIP outlining some of our research projects! See another on our ocean
acidification work.
We are also part of a larger community of Marine
Scientists affiliated with the University of Chicago.
I am also part of the interdisciplinary Committee on
Evolutionary Biology and the Center for Integrating Statistics and
the Environmental Sciences (CISES) at the University of Chicago.
I am a representative of the University of Chicago to the
Organization of Tropical Studies (OTS), and have taken courses, done
research and led alumni groups at their field stations. Find out
about the next U of C alumni trip to Costa Rica here!
Research reported on this website and website
development has been supported in part by the Andrew W. Mellon
Foundation, the National Science Foundation (DEB 9317980, DEB 9701120,
DEB 9972739, OCE 0117801, OCE 0452687, OISE 0456110, DEB 0608178, DEB
0919420), the U. S. EPA (via the Center for Integrating Statistics and
the Environmental Sciences), the SeaDoc Society, and the Olympic Natural
Resources Center.
|
|
-
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Dec 08, 2010 02:25 PM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Dec 07, 2010 11:47 AM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Nov 16, 2010 08:56 AM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Nov 16, 2010 08:55 AM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Nov 16, 2010 08:53 AM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Nov 06, 2010 09:30 AM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Nov 06, 2010 09:24 AM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Oct 25, 2010 08:46 PM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Oct 25, 2010 08:44 PM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Oct 25, 2010 08:43 PM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Oct 25, 2010 08:39 PM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Oct 20, 2010 11:50 PM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Oct 20, 2010 03:49 PM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Oct 20, 2010 03:29 PM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Oct 19, 2010 09:46 PM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Oct 19, 2010 04:29 PM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Oct 15, 2010 01:43 PM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Oct 14, 2010 08:26 PM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Oct 14, 2010 03:55 PM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Oct 14, 2010 03:51 PM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Oct 14, 2010 03:50 PM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Oct 14, 2010 03:49 PM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Oct 14, 2010 03:49 PM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Oct 14, 2010 03:49 PM
↑ Compare ↓
Publish
by
Tim Wootton
on
Oct 14, 2010 03:42 PM
Retract
by
Tim Wootton
on
Oct 14, 2010 03:42 PM
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Oct 14, 2010 03:38 PM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Oct 14, 2010 03:32 PM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Oct 14, 2010 03:31 PM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Oct 14, 2010 03:26 PM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Oct 14, 2010 03:15 PM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Oct 14, 2010 03:07 PM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Oct 14, 2010 03:03 PM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Oct 14, 2010 03:03 PM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Sep 28, 2010 11:34 AM
↑ Compare ↓
Edited
by
Tim Wootton
on
Sep 28, 2010 11:34 AM
Publish
by
admin
on
Sep 22, 2010 04:21 PM
|