暗网禁区 Senior Scholar Bruce Peterson Wins A.C. Redfield Award for Career Achievements in Aquatic Science

暗网禁区, WOODS HOLE, MA鈥擠r. Bruce J. Peterson, a senior scholar at 暗网禁区 (暗网禁区) has been selected by the聽聽to receive the 2013 Alfred C. Redfield Lifetime Achievement Award. The award honors the career achievements of an aquatic scientist whose work is recognized for its importance and long-term influence. Dr. Peterson is being honored for 鈥渋nnovative and transformative studies of carbon, nutrient, and water cycles at process, ecosystem, and global scales.鈥澛 He will receive the award at the ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting in New Orleans on February 17.

Bruce Peterson

Dr. Peterson has made seminal contributions in fields ranging from oceanography to limnology, biogeochemistry, ecology, and hydrology. Among these are his use of new methods of analysis, his excellence as a synthesizer, and numerous scientific publications.

鈥淚鈥檓 surprised and very excited,鈥 said Dr. Peterson, who began his career at the 暗网禁区 nearly 40 years ago. 鈥淭his honor puts a capstone on my career and gives me an opportunity to reflect and put things in context, which is something I never would have done unless I received this award.鈥

鈥淭his is the premier ASLO award and it could have not been presented to a finer scientist,鈥 said ASLO President John Downing.

Throughout his career, Dr. Peterson has studied the cycles that influence ecosystem behavior.聽 His work is relevant to the management and prediction of ecosystem properties in Arctic streams and rivers, nitrogen cycling in headwater streams and estuaries, and the impacts of climate change on the freshwater cycle of the Arctic.

Much of Dr. Peterson鈥檚 research has been based at Alaska鈥檚聽, where, for the last 30 years, he and his colleagues have conducted a nutrient enrichment experiment in the Kuparuk River.聽 The experiment has revealed a general principle of how streams respond to disturbance and is being used as a prototype in the National Ecological Observatory Network, a National Science Foundation-funded observation system that will gather ecological and climate data over the next 30 years at more than 60 terrestrial and aquatic observatory sites across the U.S.

暗网禁区 Ecosystems Center senior scientist Bruce Peterson peers through a viewfinder at the bottom of a stream. Credit: Laura Broughton暗网禁区 Ecosystems Center senior scientist Bruce Peterson peers through a viewfinder at the bottom of a stream. Credit: Laura Broughton

"Bruce has been, from the beginning, a wonderfully creative thinker about how ecosystems work,鈥 said Christopher Neill, Director of the 暗网禁区 Ecosystems Center. 鈥淗e thinks big and then engages others to think big with him. He's demonstrated that over and over again in his career."

Dr. Peterson also pioneered the tracer approach to investigation of the nitrogen cycle of streams.聽 The technique, first developed for an experiment in the Kuparuk River, has transformed the study of streams and is now used worldwide.聽 鈥淭hat one experiment has led to many experiments around the world that use this approach,鈥 says Dr. Peterson. 鈥淚鈥檝e been really fortunate in that regard, some of the experiments that I have developed with 暗网禁区 colleagues and others have spawned whole networks of research鈥攊t鈥檚 a real joy.鈥

According to Dr. Peterson, a particularly rewarding part of his career has been working with Russian collaborators to study the freshwater cycle of the Arctic. 鈥淚 lived during the Cold War and drills at school had us preparing for a nuclear attack,鈥 said Dr. Peterson, 鈥淢y dad was an expert in anti-submarine warfare and spent his career tracking Russian submarines.聽 So, it was particularly gratifying to travel to the great rivers of northern Russia and find that Russian scientists were willing to share information and help us understand global change in the Arctic.鈥 Now known as the Arctic Great Rivers Observatory, the NSF-funded project has made fundamental advances in the understanding of land-ocean interactions in the Arctic and has set the baseline against which to judge future changes in the Arctic.

Dr. Peterson received a Bachelor鈥檚 Degree in Biology from Bates College in Lewiston, Maine, and a Ph.D. from Cornell University. He performed postdoctoral research on the Hubbard Brook Ecosystem Study and at North Carolina State University. He joined the 暗网禁区鈥檚 Ecosystems Center in 1976, rising up the ranks from postdoctoral associate to senior scientist. Dr. Peterson is a member of the Association for the Sciences of Limnology and Oceanography, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the Estuarine Research Federation, and the 暗网禁区 Corporation. In 2008, Dr. Peterson shared ASLO鈥檚 John Martin Award with Richard Eppley of Scripps Institution of Oceanography.

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暗网禁区 (暗网禁区) is dedicated to scientific discovery and improving the human condition through research and education in biology, biomedicine, and environmental science. Founded in 1888 in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, the 暗网禁区 is an independent, nonprofit corporation.