Draft:Sarah E. Evans
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Sarah E. Evans | |
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Alma mater | Grinell College Colorado State University |
Scientific career | |
Institutions | Michigan State University |
Thesis | Microbial and biogeochemical responses to changing precipitation patterns in grassland ecosystems (2012) |
Doctoral advisor | Matthew Wallenstein Ingrid Burke |
Website | saraheevanslab |
Sarah E. Evans is a microbial ecologist from the United States and a Red Cedar Distinguished Professor at Michigan State University.[1] She is a member of the Department of Integrative Biology[2] and the Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior program[3], and is Co-Director of the Long Term Ecological Research site at Kellogg Biological Station, where she is based.[4][5]
Education and career
[edit]Evans graduated in 2005 from Grinnell College with a major in Biology and received her Ph.D in Ecology in 2012 from Colorado State University, where she was a student with Matthew Wallenstein and Ingrid Burke.[6] Her dissertation focused on microbial and biogeochemical responses to changing precipitation patterns in grassland ecosystems.[7] She worked as a postdoctoral researcher at University of California, Irvine from 2012-2014 with Steve Allison and Kiona Ogle, where she studied the effects of dispersal on microbial community structure. Evans joined the faculty of Michigan State University in 2014.[6]
Research
[edit]Evans studies how ecological disturbance, such as drought and intense land management, influence the ecosystem function(s) of soil microbial communities.[6] She developed and tested a framework that extended ‘macro’-ecological frameworks of adaptive strategies developed for plants and animals, such as the Competition-Stress tolerator-Ruderal (CSR) triangle and r/K selection theory, to microbes, and used it to show how soil microbial communities respond to altered rainfall patterns.[8] She also examines how historical drought conditions alter microbial community responses to contemporary drought, and has shown that the abundance of these drought-adapted microbes alter ecosystem services, such as soil carbon cycling.[9]
In addition to a focus on drought, Evans’ research has revealed the extent to which intensive agricultural management practices, such as excess nitrogen fertilization, influence beneficial microbial ecosystem services, including non-symbiotic nitrogen fixation and soil carbon cycling.[10]
Evans’ work has also demonstrated the importance of overland dispersal of microbes on plant-microbe community assembly.[11] Her work in the Namb desert showed that fog transports diverse microbial communities from the ocean for 50km inland, affecting the types and abundances of microbes present on land.[12]
Awards and Honors
[edit]Evans received the Grinnell College Alumni Scholar Award in 2013, which “honors Grinnell alums who have distinguished themselves by their extraordinary contributions of service to the College, their profession, and/or their community”.[13] In 2020 she received the Michigan State University Outstanding Mentor Award for her “impressive commitment to mentoring and her students’ development and well-being”.[14] Evans was named a fellow in the Earth Leadership Program in 2022[15] and was appointed Red Cedar Distinguished Professor at Michigan State University in 2024.[1]
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Red Cedar Distinguished Professors at MSU". Michigan State University.
- ^ "Integrative Biology Directory". MSU College of Natural Science.
- ^ "Core Faculty". MSU Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior.
- ^ "Faculty". Kellogg Biological Station.
- ^ "KBS Long-term Ecological Research". Kellogg Biological Station.
- ^ a b c "The Evans Lab".
- ^ "Microbial and biogeochemical responses to changing precipitation patterns in grassland ecosystems". Digital Collections of Colorado.
- ^ "Microorganism adaptation to climate change plays major role in ecosystem functions, says Colorado State University researcher". Colorado State University.
- ^ Evans, SE; Allison, SD; Hawkes, CV (5 Mar 2022). "Microbes, memory, and moisture: predicting microbial moisture responses and their impact on carbon cycling". Functional Ecology. 36: 1430–1441. doi:10.1111/1365-2435.14034.
- ^ "Working together for a better tomorrow: W.K. Kellogg Annual Report 2016-17" (PDF). Kellogg Biological Station.
- ^ "Fog is Full of Microbes". The Atlantic.
- ^ Evas, SE; Dueker, ME; Logan, JR; Weathers, KC. "The biology of fog: results from coastal Maine and Namib Desert reveal common rivers of fog microbial composition". Science of the Total Environment. 647: 1547–1556. doi:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.08.045.
- ^ "Grinnell College Alumni Awards". Grinnell College.
- ^ "Graduate School Outstanding Mentor Awards". Michigan State University.
- ^ "2022 North American Cohort". Earth Leadership Program.
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