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John Moore

John Moore

Director, Natural Resource Ecology Laboratory, Colorado State University

John.Moore@colostate.edu

Natural Resources Ecology Laboratory
Colorado State University
1499 Campus Delivery
Fort Collins, CO 80523-1499

Titles

  • Professor and Head, Ecosystem Science and Sustainability, Colorado State University
  • Director, Natural Resource Ecology Laboratory, Colorado State University

Biography

Moore’s research interests are in the fields of soil ecology, mathematical/theoretical ecology, and the application of the theory of complex adaptive systems to teaching and learning.  His research on food web structure, function and dynamics is positioned at the interfaces of community ecology, ecosystem ecology, and evolution linking species traits and adaptions to biogeochemical cycles.  He pioneered the concepts that detritus (non-living organic material) is an important source of energy and that energy flow originating from primary producers and detritus and mediated by trophic interactions among species in communities is compartmentalized spatially and temporally in ways that enhance their dynamic stability.  His work has contributed to our understanding of how soil organisms contribute to soil formation and nutrient retention in sustainable agricultural practices in temperate regions, and to the carbon balance in arctic tundra ecosystems.

Education

  • MS, Statistics, Colorado State University, 1996
  • PhD, Zoology, Colorado State University, 1986
  • MS, Zoology, Michigan State University, 1981
  • BA, Zoology, University of California-Santa Barbara, 1978

External Links

Journal Articles

2018

Moore, J. C. 2018. Predicting tipping points in complex environmental systems. Proceedings of the National Academy Sciences of the United States of America 115(4):635-636. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1721206115. (link )

2017

Andres, P., J. C. Moore, F. Cotrufo, K. Denef, M. L. Haddix, R. Molowny-Horas, M. Riba and D. H. Wall. 2017. Grazing and edaphic properties mediate soil biotic response to altered precipitation patterns in a semiarid prairie. Soil Biology and Biochemistry 113(Oct):263-274. DOI: 10.1016/j.soilbio.2017.06.022. (link )