James Lewis – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu The official news site for Fordham University. Fri, 19 Apr 2024 16:56:23 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://now.fordham.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/favicon.png James Lewis – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu 32 32 232360065 Calder Center Celebrates 50 Years of Ecology Research https://now.fordham.edu/science/calder-center-celebrates-50-years-of-ecology-research/ Mon, 17 Jul 2017 14:00:00 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=71469 Fifty years after Fordham acquired the 113-acre Rockmoor estate in Armonk, New York, the Louis Calder Center, as it was rechristened, continues to serve as a unique urban outpost for biological research.

Thomas Daniels, Ph.D., director of the center, said the research being conducted in labs there is more important than ever, as every major problem we face today has a biological basis at some point.

“When we talk about global warming, it means forests are changing, vector-borne diseases are coming into places they’ve never been before, world hunger is becoming an issue as our population size is likely to outstrip carrying capacity, and landscapes are going to change with rising sea levels.” he said.

“So if we don’t have people at ground level making good decisions, going to meetings to talk about the value of conservation, and understanding the fact that climate change is a function of human activity, then it’s going to lead to further and further hardship down the road. That’s the value of having an educated populace. Certainly Fordham sees that, and we see it here at Calder.”

]]>
71469
Study Highlights Extreme Rainfall as Unexplored Area of Research https://now.fordham.edu/science/study-highlights-extreme-rainfall-as-unexplored-area-of-research/ Tue, 17 Jun 2014 17:57:18 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=39898 Scientists agree that one of the effects of global climate change will be major changes in the amount and timing of rainfall.
And while many studies have been conducted to gauge the reaction of plants to draughts, less has been done to learn what happens to plants when it rains a lot, or at unusual times.
In a new paper published by the journal Biogeosciences, James Lewis, Ph.D., professor and chair in the Department of Biological Sciences at Fordham, helped shed some light on the current gaps in research.
“Impacts of Extreme Precipitation and Seasonal Changes in Precipitation on Plants”is the result of a collaborative effort between Lewis and Melanie Zeppel and Jessica Wilks of Macquarie University, Sydney.
It’s a global review of how plants respond to extreme precipitation in different ecosystems around the planet, such as dry grasslands, woodlands, warm humid tropical rainforests, savannas, as well as cold deserts.

Plants from one of the study regions, cold desert Canyonlands National Park, Southern Utah.
Photo by Patrick Hudson
Because changes in both the amount and timing of precipitation change soil water content, plant growth is likely to be affected. This has implications for food production, forestry industry, biodiversity and carbon and water cycles. Pests, pathogens and invasive species are likewise influenced by extreme precipitation changing soil water content.
Lewis said the review, which involved thousands of papers going back 30 years, came about after they began examining the studies already done on savannahs, for a study they plan to conduct on this topic. They found that some manipulative studies have been done on grasslands and on temperate and tropical forests, but that’s about the extent of it.
Scientists can make general predictions about plants and rainfall based whether plant’s soil bed is of sand or clay, whether the roots go deep or shallow, and whether a plant has a short or long lifespan.
But no one knows just how differently tropical forests will respond, compared to boreal forests in the Arctic or even deserts. Of special concern is how studies point toward a need for greater irrigation of agricultural systems, which will likely experience less rainfall.
“Precipitation patterns are likely to vary in many parts of the planet,” Lewis said.
“And in areas that are relatively wet, this may have negative consequences for plants, particularly if those changes in rainfall are reductions in the amount of rain during the growing season.
Other areas may actually benefit, however, “because the rainfall may actually increase during the periods when plants are growing and decrease during the periods when they’re not.”
Lewis said the study can serve as a road map for future studies of extreme precipitation.
“We don’t view the review as definitive; we view it as pointing out the next steps,” he said.
]]>
39898
Plant Biologist Works to Support Biodiversity https://now.fordham.edu/inside-fordham/plant-biologist-works-to-support-biodiversity/ Mon, 28 Mar 2011 16:26:21 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=9378
James D. Lewis, Ph.D., studies both man-made and natural threats to biodiversity.
Photo by Patrick Verel

Sometimes, a wingless insect that’s only slightly larger than the period at the end of this sentence is all it takes to throw an ecosystem out of whack.

Take the hemlock woolly adelgid. The insect, which is similar to an aphid, is ravaging Eastern hemlock forests by sucking nutrients from trees and simultaneously injecting them with a toxin against which they have no natural defense.

James D. Lewis, Ph.D., associate professor of biology, said this activity has the potential to disrupt a lot more than just the life of one type of plant.

“If we lose the hemlock, we’ll see a potentially dramatic shift in the structure of the forest. We’re going to lose a habitat for animals; we’re going to lose the coolness that’s associated with hemlocks in the summertime and the warmth that’s associated with hemlock in the wintertime,” he said.

Thanks to the research that Lewis and his colleagues are conducting at the Louis Calder Center Biological Field Station in Armonk, N.Y., people have a better understanding of threats to biodiversity such as the woolly adelgid. When a hemlock dies, for instance, it sets off a domino effect, much of which is hidden from the naked eye.

On the trees’ roots are mycorrhizal fungi, which help them absorb minerals in exchange for carbohydrates. If the trees die, the fungi starve, and with fewer fungi in the system, trees that are not hemlocks have an increasingly difficult time growing.

Then there’s the nitrogen released by the dead tree. It can be a valuable nutrient for other plants, but too much can pollute water systems. Excess nitrogen, Lewis said, is one of the biggest threats to the reservoirs that supply New York City.

“It’s part of the reason they’ve discussed building a $10-20 billion filtering plant,” he said.

If hemlocks do not survive adelgid infestations, they’ll join elms and chestnuts on a list of species that were once plentiful in the Northeast but now are rare. When it comes to invasive species, there is no shortage of subjects to study, as even maple trees, the source of fall foliage and syrup, are being attacked by Asian long-horned beetles.

In addition to invasive species, Lewis focuses on man-made threats to biodiversity, from the mundane (people trampling plants) to the massive (global warming). All pose threats that are poorly understood but potentially have grave consequences.

“Typically, communities that have more biodiversity are more stable,” Lewis said. “They persist for longer and they’re more capable of withstanding disturbances like a hurricane or a drought. Communities that have very little biodiversity are much more prone to going extinct if disturbed by climatic events, fires or humans.”

Along with nitrogen, phosphorus is the other key plant nutrient that Lewis has studied. A paper he co-wrote, “Phosphorus Supply Drives Nonlinear Responses of Cottonwood (Populus deltoides) to Increases in CO2 Concentration from Glacial to Future Concentrations” (New Phytologist, 2010), has received a great deal of attention in Australia and Africa, where phosphorus, in contrast to North America and Europe, is more commonly limiting than nitrogen.

He wanted to know how cottonwood—a tree widely used for paper and pulp—reacts when levels of carbon dioxide (CO2) rise but supplies of phosphorus dip. Experts predict that at the current rate it is being mined, phosphorus supplies will be exhausted in 20 years, so Lewis said it’s important to know if the levels of CO2 in the atmosphere—which have been rising—might help offset this loss.

“Cottonwood exists from the East Coast all the way to the West Coast, so we thought to look at that as a potential canary in the coal mine,” he said. “If we start seeing phosphorus limitation become an issue, what might happen, and how might the forest respond to it?”

The study, which took 20 years to complete, revealed that increased CO2 does not make a very large difference in dogwoods with poor levels of phosphorus, a finding that should serve as a wake-up call, he said.

Increased urbanization is another challenge to biodiversity, and for this research, Lewis said New York City is a great laboratory. From the heat island effects of concentrated asphalt, steel and glass to increases in nitrogen from industry and CO2 from vehicles, the influences that cities have on plants is voluminous.

“You have all these indirect effects from people, so teasing those things apart can be really challenging. But that’s what makes it exciting, because then you have all these things you can look at. It’s not just that we’re going to look at how water or nitrogen affects plants. We have all these things we can play with to determine how plants are being affected by humans.”

Lewis said working with local land managers also gives them a chance to make a real difference in the quest to preserve biodiversity.

“They’ll say, ‘We have a preserve that’s 50 acres and surrounded by subdivisions. What can we do to protect the species that are there? What do we do to manage the plants so we can have birds and butterflies and bees and the things that people really enjoy seeing?’” he said.

“We can go in and start to tease apart the threads, and start to see what the key things are they have to focus on.”

As for future research, Lewis is interested in the effects of droughts on local ecosystems. Although droughts are mostly a West Coast phenomenon in the United States, they do happen periodically in the East.

“If we have a drought, and then we layer on top of that the heat island effect, and we layer on top of that a temperature change associated with climate change, we’re potentially pushing these plants beyond what they can handle,” he said.

“We’ve started looking to see to what extent is drought killing the trees around here, and to what extent does drought make trees more susceptible to pests like the emerald ash bore and the hemlock woolly adelgid?”

“We deal with a lot of really morbid issues in the lab,” he joked. “We should call it the plant morbidity lab.”

]]>
9378
Students Present Research at Calder Symposium https://now.fordham.edu/science/students-present-research-at-calder-symposium/ Thu, 16 Aug 2007 18:29:14 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=34971 Nine students from throughout the country presented their research as part of the 2007 Calder Summer Undergraduate Research Symposium at Flom Auditorium in the Walsh Family Library at the Rose Hill campus on Thursday, Aug. 16.

The all-day event featured a keynote address by Sarwan Dhir, Ph.D., program director of the Center for Biotechnology at Fort Valley State University. “You have worked really hard,” Dhir told the students. “This was just a seed for you—it’s up to you to grow now.”

The Calder Summer Undergraduate Research (CSUR) Program, which has been held at Fordham’s Louis Calder Center Biological Field Station in Armonk since 1998, is a highly selective 12-week initiative that attracts students from across the country to conduct research under the mentorship of Fordham ecology faculty members. Participating students have access to study sites at the station and nearby ecosystems, such as the Hudson River, the Catskill Mountains and Black Rock Forest.

The students ranged from Texas A&M University in College Station, Tex., to Medger Evers College in Brooklyn. Funding for the program is provided by a grant from the National Science Foundation’s Research Experiences for Undergraduates Site Program.

John Wehr, Ph.D., associate professor and director of the Calder Center, and James Lewis, Ph.D., associate professor of biology, direct the program. “As opposed to being told about science, they’re doing science,” Wehr said. “By the end of the summer, their hard work results in some excellent science. This was a very enthusiastic group of students.”

The students each delivered 20-minute presentations about their research on topics ranging from ectomycorrhizal fungi to negative geotaxis in rice and maize weevils.

]]>
34971
Calder Center Undergraduate Research Symposium Scheduled https://now.fordham.edu/science/calder-center-undergraduate-research-symposium-scheduled/ Mon, 30 Jul 2007 19:17:06 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=34987 Fordham University will hold the 2007 Calder Summer Undergraduate Research Symposium in Flom Auditorium on the Rose Hill campus at 9 a.m. on August 16 that will feature a keynote address by Sarwan Dhir, Ph.D., program director of the Center for Biotechnology at Fort Valley State University.

The 12-week Calder Summer Undergraduate Research Program, which has been held at Fordham’s Louis J. Calder Center Biological Field Station in Armonk since 1998, is a highly selective program that attracts students from across the country to conduct research under the mentorship of Fordham ecology faculty members.

The summer program, funded by a grant from the National Science Foundation’s Research Experiences for Undergraduates Site Program, is under the direction of John Wehr, Ph.D., associate professor and director of the Calder Center, and James Lewis, Ph.D., associate professor of biology.

“The symposium is the culminating experience for these students, who come to our field station with great enthusiasm but often limited opportunities to conduct research projects of their own interest and design,” Wehr said. “Our program is hands-on learning for an entire summer. We have an excellent faculty, so it’s an amazing opportunity and our students really take advantage of the time they spend here. By the end of the summer, their hard work results in some excellent science. Some of their findings may also end up in peer-reviewed scientific publications—a great start to a young person’s scientific career. You can clearly see success and confidence in their talks in August.”

Dhir, the keynote speaker, has hosted a similar program at the Center for Biotechnology at Fort Valley State since 2001. Dhir, whose research interests focus on genetic engineering of plants for vaccine production, medicinal plant genetic engineering and biodegradable thermoplastic production, was the recipient of the 2005 Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring.

As part of Fordham’s program, students have access to study sites at the station and nearby ecosystems, such as the Hudson River, the Catskill Mountains and Black Rock Forest. This year, nine students from institutions ranging from Texas A&M University in College Station, Tex., to Medger Evers College in Brooklyn will present their research findings at the daylong symposium.

]]>
34987