1. Historical Overview of Soil Science and the Intersection of Soil and Ecology2. Primary Production Processes in Soils: Roots and Rhizosphere Associates3. Secondary Production: Activities and Functions of Heterotrophic Organisms--Microbes4. Secondary Production: Activities and Functions of Heterotrophic Organisms--The Soil Fauna5. Decomposition and Nutrient Cycling6. Soil Foodwebs: Detritivory and Microbivory in Soils7. Soil Biodiversity and Aboveground-Belowground Linkages 8. Future Developments in Soil Ecology 9. Laboratory and Field Exercises in Soil Ecology
Updated edition of an essential reference offering a holistic approach to soil ecology, including both ecosystem and evolutionary biology perspectives
David C. Coleman has been a lifelong soil ecologist with interests
in soil biodiversity and biogeochemical cycling. He conducted
research at the Savannah River Ecology Laboratory of the University
of Georgia (1965-1971), and the Natural Resource Ecology
Laboratory, Colorado State University (1972-1985). While there, he
also progressed through the ranks from Assistant to Associate and
Full Professor of Zoology and Entomology at CSU. From 1985 he has
been a Distinguished Research Professor of Ecology in the Institute
of Ecology and later the Odum School of Ecology of the University
of Georgia. He has been Professor Emeritus since 2005.
During the academic year of 1979-1980, Coleman was visiting
Research Fellow at the Department of Scientific and Industrial
Research (DSIR) Institute of Nuclear Sciences and Soil Bureau in
Lower Hutt, New Zealand. David received the Distinguished Service
award from the Soil Ecology Society in 1999 and the Distinguished
Ecosystem Scientist award from the Natural Resource Ecology
Laboratory in 2002. He served on several advisory panels on Ecology
and Ecosystems with the National Science Foundation and on an
advisory panel on Alternative Agriculture for the National Research
Council. His research has concentrated on microbial-faunal
interactions in detrital food webs in agroecosystems, e.g,
Horseshoe Bend, near Athens, and in forested watersheds at the
Coweeta Hydrologic Laboratory in western North Carolina, as part of
the Coweeta Long Term Ecological Research (LTER) study. From
1996-2002 he was co-lead PI on the Coweeta LTER project. He was
also a McMaster Visiting Research Fellow at CSIRO, Adelaide, South
Australia, January-April 2006.
David served as co-Chief Editor of Soil Biology and Biochemistry
from 1998 to 2010 and serves as its Review Editor currently. He
serves on editorial boards of several other soil biology journals.
He has published over 300 refereed journal articles and books and
is senior author of Fundamentals of Soil Ecology (second edition,
2004), and the author of Big Ecology: The Emergence of Ecosystem
Science (2010). Mac Callaham is a Research Ecologist with the USDA
Forest Service’s Southern Research Station in Athens, Georgia. He
has 25 years’ experience of working in soil ecology with projects
ranging from agroecology to ecotoxicology to grassland and forest
restoration and management. Following graduate school at Kansas
State University, he held post-doctoral positions at Oak Ridge
National Laboratory (2000-01), and with the USDA Forest Service at
Clemson University (2001-03). In 2005, Callaham became a Team
Leader within the Center for Forest Disturbance Science, a unit of
the Forest Service’s Southern Research Station
In 2005, Callaham was awarded the Southern Research Station
Director’s Award for Early Career Scientists. Having long been
interested in international research, Callaham was awarded a
Fulbright Scholarship in 2010 to participate in research in
southern Brazil with a focus on restoration of Atlantic rainforest
ecosystems. In 2014, he received a Visiting Professorship for
Senior International Scientists appointment from the Chinese
Academy of Sciences to instruct a course on soil ecology at the
Northeast Institute for Agroecology and Geography in Changchun,
China.
Callaham serves on the editorial board for Applied Soil Ecology,
and had been guest editor for peer-reviewed special issues of the
journals Pedobiologia, Applied Soil Ecology and Restoration
Ecology. Dac Crossley is a Professor Emeritus of Ecology at the
Odum School of Ecology, University of Georgia, Athens, USA. He
served as Director the Graduate Program in Ecology, at the
Institute of Ecology at UGA since its inception. He was Principal
Investigator of the Coweeta Long-Term Ecological Research site in
North Carolina. He has served as editor and reviewer of numerous
ecological and entomological journals. He currently serves as an
associate curator at the Georgia Museum of Natural History where he
curates the soil mite collection.
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