Skip to main content
Home

Navigation Menu

  • Back
  • About
    • Back
    • About

      Contact Us

      Business Address
      5241 Broad Branch Rd. NW

      Washington , DC 20015
      United States place Map
      Call Us (202) 387-640
    • Who We Are
      • Back
      • Leadership
      • Our Blueprint For Discovery
      • Board of Trustees
      • Financial Stewardship
      • Awards & Accolades
      • History
    • Connect with Us
      • Back
      • Outreach & Education
      • Newsletter
      • Yearbook
    • Working at Carnegie
      • Back
      • Applications Open: Postdoctoral Fellowships

    Contact Us

    Business Address
    5241 Broad Branch Rd. NW

    Washington , DC 20015
    United States place Map
    Call Us (202) 387-6400
  • Research
    • Back
    • Research Areas & Topics
    • Research Areas & Topics
      • Back
      • Research Areas
      • From genomes to ecosystems and from planets to the cosmos, Carnegie Science is an incubator for cutting-edge, interdisciplinary research.
      • Astronomy & Astrophysics
        • Back
        • Astronomy & Astrophysics
        • Astrophysical Theory
        • Cosmology
        • Distant Galaxies
        • Milky Way & Stellar Evolution
        • Planet Formation & Evolution
        • Solar System & Exoplanets
        • Telescope Instrumentation
        • Transient & Compact Objects
      • Earth Science
        • Back
        • Earth Science
        • Experimental Petrology
        • Geochemistry
        • Geophysics & Geodynamics
        • Mineralogy & Mineral Physics
      • Ecology
        • Back
        • Ecology
        • Atmospheric Science & Energy
        • Adaptation to Climate Change
        • Water Quality & Scarcity
      • Genetics & Developmental Biology
        • Back
        • Genetics & Developmental Biology
        • Adaptation to Climate Change
        • Developmental Biology & Human Health
        • Genomics
        • Model Organism Development
        • Nested Ecosystems
        • Symbiosis
      • Matter at Extreme States
        • Back
        • Matter at Extreme States
        • Extreme Environments
        • Extreme Materials
        • Mineralogy & Mineral Physics
      • Planetary Science
        • Back
        • Planetary Science
        • Astrobiology
        • Cosmochemistry
        • Mineralogy & Mineral Physics
        • Planet Formation & Evolution
        • Solar System & Exoplanets
      • Plant Science
        • Back
        • Plant Science
        • Adaptation to Climate Change
        • Nested Ecosystems
        • Photosynthesis
        • Symbiosis
    • Divisions
      • Back
      • Divisions
      • Biosphere Sciences & Engineering
        • Back
        • Biosphere Sciences & Engineering
        • About

          Contact Us

          Business Address
          5241 Broad Branch Rd. NW

          Washington , DC 20015
          United States place Map
          Call Us (202) 387-640
        • Research
        • Culture
      • Earth & Planets Laboratory
        • Back
        • Earth & Planets Laboratory
        • About

          Contact Us

          Business Address
          5241 Broad Branch Rd. NW

          Washington , DC 20015
          United States place Map
          Call Us (202) 387-640
        • Research
        • Culture
        • Campus
      • Observatories
        • Back
        • Observatories
        • About

          Contact Us

          Business Address
          5241 Broad Branch Rd. NW

          Washington , DC 20015
          United States place Map
          Call Us (202) 387-640
        • Research
        • Culture
        • Campus
    • Instrumentation
      • Back
      • Instrumentation
      • Our Telescopes
        • Back
        • Our Telescopes
        • Magellan Telescopes
        • Swope Telescope
        • du Pont Telescope
      • Observatories Machine Shop
      • EPL Research Facilities
      • EPL Machine Shop
      • Mass Spectrometry Facility
      • Advanced Imaging Facility
  • People
    • Back
    • People
      Observatory Staff

      Featured Staff Member

      Staff Member

      Staff Member

      Professional Title

      Learn More
      Observatory Staff

      Search For

    • Search All People
      • Back
      • Staff Scientists
      • Leadership
      • Biosphere Science & Engineering People
      • Earth & Planets Laboratory People
      • Observatories People
    Observatory Staff
    Dr. Michael Blanton
    Observatories Director and Crawford M. Greenewalt Chair

    Featured Staff Member

    Observatories Director Michael Blanton

    Dr. Michael Blanton

    Observatories Director and Crawford M. Greenewalt Chair

    Learn More
    Observatory Staff
    Dr. Michael Blanton
    Observatories Director and Crawford M. Greenewalt Chair

    Astronomer Michael R. Blanton joined the Carnegie Science Observatories as its 12th director in January 2026. In this role he oversees astronomical research in Pasadena and telescope operations at Las Campanas Observatory in Chile.

    Search For

    Search All Staff
  • Events
    • Back
    • Events
    • Search All Events
      • Back
      • Public Events
      • Biosphere Science & Engineering Events
      • Earth & Planets Laboratory Events
      • Observatories Events

    Upcoming Events

    Events

    Events

    Banner no Text Mission MAtchmaker
    Science Social

    Mission Matchmaker

    John Mulchaey, Andrew Steele, Michael Greklek-McKeon

    March 23

    7:00pm EDT

    Colloquium

    Dr. Anirudh Chiti (Stanford University)

    Signatures of the First Stars and Galaxies in the Local Group

    March 24

    11:00am PDT

    Lava exoplanet
    Seminar

    Catherine Manea (University of Utah)

    TBD

    March 27

    12:15pm PDT

  • News
    • Back
    • News
    • Search All News
      • Back
      • Biosphere Science & Engineering News
      • Earth & Planets Laboratory News
      • Observatories News
      • Carnegie Science News
    News

    Recent News

    News

    Latest

    • - Any -
    • Biosphere Sciences & Engineering
    • Carnegie Science
    • Earth & Planets Laboratory
    • Observatories
    expand_more
    Read all News
    Pulsing xenia with clownfish
    Breaking News
    January 29, 2026

    Carnegie Science Celebrates Second Annual Carnegie Science Day

    Stars in space
    Breaking News
    September 30, 2025

    Vote for Carnegie Science’s 2025 Holiday Card

    Artist's rendering of the Giant Magellan Telescope courtesy of Damien Jemison, Giant Magellan Telescope - GMTO Corporation
    Breaking News
    June 12, 2025

    NSF advances Giant Magellan Telescope to Final Design Phase

  • Resources
    • Back
    • Resources
    • Search All
      • Back
      • Employee Resources
      • Scientific Resources
      • Postdoc Resources
      • Media Resources
      • Archival Resources
    • Quick Links
      • Back
      • Employee Intranet
      • Dayforce
      • Careers
      • Observing at LCO
      • Locations and Addresses
  • Donate
    • Back
    • Donate
      - ,

    • Make a Donation
      • Back
      • Support Scientific Research
      • The Impact of Your Gift
      • Carnegie Champions
      • Planned Giving
    Jo Ann Eder

    I feel passionately about the power of nonprofits to bolster healthy communities.

    - Jo Ann Eder , Astronomer and Alumna

    Header Text

    Postdoctoral alumna Jo Ann Eder is committed to making the world a better place by supporting organizations, like Carnegie, that create and foster STEM learning opportunities for all. 

    Learn more arrow_forward
  • Home

Abstract
Phytoplankton are key players in global biogeochemical cycles, and the effects of ocean warming on their carbon-nitrogen-phosphorus (CNP) stoichiometry, photosynthesis, size, morphology, growth rates, and other traits are of great ecological consequence. The physiological mechanisms of adaptation to temperature in phytoplankton are poorly understood, as are the consequences of the evolution of these processes (e.g., nutrient uptake, photosynthesis) for global biogeochemistry. In general, high temperatures favor smaller cells with higher surface area-to-volume ratios, but repeatable patterns in cellular CNP stoichiometry across temperature remain elusive. Here, we compared thermal reaction norms for cellular C, N, P, and chlorophyll a (Chl a) content and for carbon assimilation rate in replicate populations of the marine diatom Thalassiosira pseudonana evolved for 500 generations at 16 degrees C and 31 degrees C. We also examined the thermal reaction norms for cell volume and morphological traits. T. pseudonana has a cylindrical frustule and likely primarily exchanges materials with the environment through the round valve faces. We found that the 31 degrees C-selected T. pseudonana populations had smaller cells and higher per-biovolume densities of nutrients and Chl a than the 16 degrees C-selected populations across assay temperatures but there were no detectable patterns in CNP stoichiometry. The 31 degrees C-selected populations also had higher valve surface area-to-cell volume ratio that increased more with temperature, suggesting better nutrient uptake capabilities than in the 16 degrees C-selected populations. Our study demonstrates that temperature-dependent physiological plasticity may evolve differently at different temperatures and suggests that future phytoplankton communities will consist of smaller, more nutrient-dense cells.
View Full Publication open_in_new
Abstract
There is a growing consensus that traits offer a powerful way to examine the relationship between the environment, organismal strategies, species interactions, and ecological success. To date, trait-based research has largely been focusing on individual trophic levels and not on cross-level interactions. Looking at traits not only within but across trophic levels and identifying traits that together define trophic interactions holds a great potential for understanding the mechanisms of interactions. Here, we outline the conceptual foundation for cross-trophic trait-based frameworks, using planktonic food webs as an example. First, we compile a list of traits important within different individual trophic levels and show that there are traits that are common across trophic levels ("universal" traits), as well as trophic level-specific traits. Next, we focus on traits that characterize interactions across trophic levels, focusing on two types of interaction-grazer-primary producer and host-parasite, identifying the similarities and differences between these interactions. We outline the trait hierarchies that define possible and realized intertrophic interactions and their strengths. We then highlight the importance of trade-offs among those traits in shaping interactions and explaining general patterns in the structure and function of food webs. Finally, we discuss the environmental influences on traits, their eco-evolutionary responses to changing conditions and how those responses may alter trophic interactions. The extension of trait-based approaches from individual trophic levels to food webs and different trophic interactions should stimulate further conceptual development, enrich the field of aquatic sciences, and provide a framework to better predict global change effects on ecosystems.
View Full Publication open_in_new
Abstract
Hydrolab and nutrient data collected from Gull Lake, Michigan, USA during years 2014-15 and reported in the paper below:Safaie, A., Litchman, E., and Phanikumar, M.S., Decreasing Groundwater Supply Can Exacerbate Lake Warming and Trigger Algal Blooms, Journal of Geophysical Research - Biogeosciences (2021)
View Full Publication open_in_new
Abstract
A complex interplay of environmental variables impacts phytoplankton community composition and physiology. Temperature and nutrient availability are two principal factors driving phytoplankton growth and composition, but are often investigated independently and on individual species in the laboratory. To assess the individual and interactive effects of temperature and nutrient concentration on phytoplankton community composition and physiology, we altered both the thermal and nutrient conditions of a cold-adapted spring phytoplankton community in Narragansett Bay, Rhode Island, when surface temperature was 2.6 degrees C and chlorophyll > 9 mu g L-1. Water was incubated in triplicate at -0.5 degrees C, 2.6 degrees C, and 6 degrees C for 10 d. At each temperature, treatments included both nutrient amendments (N, P, Si addition) and controls (no macronutrients added). The interactive effects of temperature and resource availability altered phytoplankton growth and community structure. Nutrient amendments resulted in species sorting and communities dominated by larger species. Under replete nutrients, warming tripled phytoplankton growth rates, but under in situ nutrient conditions, increased temperature acted antagonistically, reducing growth rates by as much as 33%, suggesting communities became nutrient limited. The temperature-nutrient interplay shifted the relative proportions of each species within the phytoplankton community, resulting in more silica rich cells at decreasing temperatures, irrespective of nutrients, and C : N that varied based on resource availability, with nutrient limitation inducing a 47% increase in C : N at increasing temperatures. Our results illustrate how the temperature-nutrient interplay can alter phytoplankton community dynamics, with changes in temperature amplifying or exacerbating the nutrient effect with implications for higher trophic levels and carbon flux.
View Full Publication open_in_new
Abstract
Mathematica code for "A general framework for species-abundance distributions: linking traits and dispersal to explain commonness and rarity", Ecology Letters. Requires: Wolfram Mathematica (tested on v13.1) EcoEvo package (tested on v1.6.4) This research was supported by the Simons Foundation grant 343149, NSF grant DEB 17-54250 and NASA grant 80NSSC18K1084. Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Open Access
View Full Publication open_in_new
Abstract
Mathematica code for "A general framework for species-abundance distributions: linking traits and dispersal to explain commonness and rarity", Ecology Letters. Requires: Wolfram Mathematica (tested on v13.1) EcoEvo package (tested on v1.6.4) This research was supported by the Simons Foundation grant 343149, NSF grant DEB 17-54250 and NASA grant 80NSSC18K1084. Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Open Access
View Full Publication open_in_new
Abstract
Dental microwear consists of microscopic damage features on the occlusal surfaces of tooth enamel and reflects physical properties of the diet, as well as enamel structure and post- mortem history of the tooth. Microwear analysis has been used to infer the diets of extinct mammals through comparison of features on fossil teeth with those on teeth of living mammals with known diets. A method for documenting microwear of large mammals using a light microscope was developed as an alternative to approaches based on scanning electron microscopy. We adapted this method for investigating microwear features on squirrel teeth. Both modern and fossil squirrels occur in diverse terrestrial habitats and eat a range of herbivorous to omnivorous diets.
View Full Publication open_in_new
Abstract
Dental microwear consists of microscopic damage features on the occlusal surfaces of tooth enamel and reflects physical properties of the diet, as well as enamel structure and post-mortem history of the tooth. Microwear analysis has been used to infer the diets of extinct mammals through comparison of features on fossil teeth with those on teeth of living mammals with known diets. A method for documenting microwear of large mammals using a light microscope was developed as an alternative to approaches based on scanning electron microscopy. We adapted this method for investigating microwear features on squirrel teeth. Both modern and fossil squirrels occur in diverse terrestrial habitats and eat a range of herbivorous to omnivorous diets. We compared microwear features from upper molars of several modern species of frugivorous tree squirrels and omnivorous ground squirrels. We also examined fossil sciurids from the Miocene Siwalik sequence of Pakistan and a Pliocene locality in the central plains of the United States. We found significant differences in microwear features among modern squirrels of different diets and habitats, suggesting that microwear features can be used to infer the diets or preferred habitats of extinct species. Microwear features were preserved on some of the fossil specimens. A comparison of Pliocene Spermophilus rexroadensis to modern Spermophilus suggests a diet similar to that of the modern species examined. Microwear of Miocene Eutamias differed from the pattern in any of the living squirrels examined. The approach presented here holds strong potential for illuminating the trophic ecomorphology of small-mammal fossils.
View Full Publication open_in_new
Abstract
The principal objections to the proposition that organic agriculture can contribute significantly to the global food supply are low yields and insufficient quantities of organically acceptable fertilizers. We evaluated the universality of both claims. For the first claim, we compared yields of organic versus conventional or low-intensive food production for a global dataset of 293 examples and estimated the average yield ratio (organic: non-organic) of different food categories for the developed and the developing world. For most food categories, the average yield ratio was slightly < 1.0 for studies in the developed world and > 1.0 for studies in the developing world. With the average yield ratios, we modeled the global food supply that could be grown organically on the current agricultural land base. Model estimates indicate that organic methods could produce enough food on a global per capita basis to sustain the current human population, and potentially an even larger population, without increasing the agricultural land base. We also evaluated the amount of nitrogen potentially available from fixation by leguminous cover crops used as fertilizer. Data from temperate and tropical agroecosystems suggest that leguminous cover crops could fix enough nitrogen to replace the amount of synthetic fertilizer currently in use. These results indicate that organic agriculture has the potential to contribute quite substantially to the global food supply, while reducing the detrimental environmental impacts of conventional agriculture. Evaluation and review of this paper have raised important issues about crop rotations under organic versus conventional agriculture and the reliability of grey-literature sources. An ongoing dialogue on these subjects can be found in the Forum editorial of this issue.
View Full Publication open_in_new

Pagination

  • Previous page chevron_left
  • …
  • Page 466
  • Page 467
  • Page 468
  • Page 469
  • Current page 470
  • Page 471
  • Page 472
  • Page 473
  • Page 474
  • …
  • Next page chevron_right
Subscribe to

Get the latest

Subscribe to our newsletters.

Privacy Policy
Home
  • Instagram instagram
  • Twitter twitter
  • Youtube youtube
  • Facebook facebook

Science

  • Biosphere Sciences & Engineering
  • Earth & Planets Laboratory
  • Observatories
  • Our Research Areas
  • Our Blueprint For Discovery

Legal

  • Financial Statements
  • Conflict of Interest Policy
  • Privacy Policy

Careers

  • Working at Carnegie
  • Scientific and Technical Jobs
  • Administrative & Support Jobs
  • Postdoctoral Program
  • Carnegie Connect (For Employees)

Contact Us

  • Contact Administration
  • Media Contacts

Business Address

5241 Broad Branch Rd. NW

Washington, DC 20015

place Map

© Copyright Carnegie Science 2026