Urban ForestrySarah Garvey
2020 The Garden Club of America Zone VI Fellowship in Urban Forestry
Soil Respiration and Other Microbial Processes in Urban Forest Fragments
Sarah M. Garvey is a PhD candidate studying urban biogeochemistry in the Department of Earth & Environment at Boston University. She is researching the interactive effects of urbanization and forest fragmentation on soils. For her study, she established eight field sites along an urban-to-rural gradient in Massachusetts to understand drivers of soil carbon losses as they are affected by human activity. Fragmentation is a hallmark of urban forests, and this work will help elucidate how urban forests cycle and store carbon. As human populations grow and urbanization increases, further understanding of urban forests is critical to making predictions of carbon dynamics over time. Funded by Casey Trees
The Garden Club of America Zone VI Fellowship in Urban Forestry
To advance the field of urban forestry by encouraging students to study the planning, management, horticulture and ecology of urban forests, and the effect of healthy urban forests on people and the environment.
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