Skip to Content
Report an accessibility problem
Hinsby Cadillo-Quiroz

Hinsby Cadillo-Quiroz

hinsby@asu.edu

(480) 965-4482

School of Life Sciences
Arizona State University
P.O. Box 874501
Tempe, AZ 85287-4501-4501

Biography

Hinsby Cadillo–Quiroz studies how microbes participate in ecosystem and applied processes. He and his research team are investigating whether microbe-mediated organismal and environmental interactions drive ecosystem processes, particularly carbon cycling. They are also examining how the environment, in turn, affects the evolution of microorganisms.

Cadillo-Quiroz and his collaborators focus on methane-producing Archaeafrom anaerobic, high carbon-content environments, as well as Bacteria and the ecological interactions between Archaea and Bacteria.

They study new groups of microbes, microbe community patterns, and the diversity and ecological implications of microbe genomics. The team's research may be used to predict changes in greenhouse gas levels and develop bioenergy applications.

Journal Articles

2019

Buessecker, S., K. Tylor, J. J. Nye, K. E. Holbert, J. D. Urquiza Munoz, J. B. Glass, H. E. Hartnett and H. Cadillo-Quiroz. 2019. Effects of sterilization techniques on chemodenitrification and N2O production in tropical peat soil microcosms. Biogeosciences 16:4601-4612. DOI: 10.5194/bg-16-4601-2019. (link )

2017

Chapman, E. J., H. Cadillo-Quiroz, D. L. Childers, M. R. Turetsky and M. P. Waldrop. 2017. Soil microbial community composition is correlated to soil carbon processing along a boreal wetland formation gradient. European Journal of Soil Biology 82(Sep-Oct):17-26. DOI: 10.1016/j.ejsobi.2017.08.001. (link )