2005 - Dr. LeRoy Poff, Colorado State University

Dr. LeRoy PoffLeRoy Poff visited the CRI in 2005 presenting papers on "Homogenization of hydrological climate landscapes: la implications for riverine biodiversity and resilience" and "Using species traits to explain lotic community response to multi-scaled environmental gradients". 

Dr. Poff's research interests are guided by the broad consideration of how ecological processes and patterns are constrained by habitat structure and environmental variability at multiple scales in aquatic ecosystems.

Small-scale research focuses on how spatial habitat heterogeneity influences the strength and outcomes of interactions among insect grazers and how these grazers regulate stream algal production across gradients of current velocity.

At larger scales, research focuses on testing general ecological theory predicting how the structure and functional organization of biological biological communities (invertebrates and fish) depend on habitat stability. We are interested in integrating ecological response across all levels of habitat constraint, from local patches to whole watersheds. This research provides a basis for predicting aquatic community attributes at geographic scales and for ecological responses to land- use alterations and regional climate changes.  Poster

http://rydberg.biology.colostate.edu/faculty/profile.php?name=Poff