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Dr. Amy Zanne

Ecologist and Evolutionary Biologist | PhD, University of Florida

Expertise
plants, termites, fungi, functional ecology, macroecology, macroevolution, decomposition, carbon cycle, global change

External siteamyzanne.org | Profile (pdf)
Other affiliations: Visiting Scientist, University of Campinas, Campinas, Brazil
Twitter and Instagram: @amyzanne 

845 677-7600 x232

Amy Zanne is an ecologist and evolutionary biologist. Her research focuses on interactions among plants, microbes and insects, and how they affect carbon cycling under current and future projected climates. To explore these questions, she also studies ecological, evolutionary, and biogeographic determinants of species distributions by measuring physiological, morphological, and anatomical functional traits. She explores ecosystem-level consequences of differences in species and trait distributions, for instance, traits of plants, microbes and insects that most affect rates and forms of carbon release with feedbacks to the earth system. Currently, she has international field projects in Australia, Brazil, Chile and Antarctica and local field projects at Cary. Most recently, she is starting several projects. These include research in Brazilian Cerrado to determine the role of seasonal wetlands in storing carbon and releasing CO2 and CH4, as well as building a global network of networks and database of databases of plant-microbe interactions. 

Displaying 81 - 91 of 91
Chapman, CA, LJ Chapman, Amy Zanne, , and CJ Clark. 2005. “A 12-Year Phenological Record of Fruiting: Implications for Frugivore Populations and Indicators of Climate Change”. Tropical Fruits and Frugivores: The Search for Strong Interactors. PO BOX 17, 3300 AA DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS: SPRINGER.
Zanne, Amy, and CA Chapman. 2005. “Diversity of Woody Species in Forest, Treefall Gaps, and Edge in Kibale National Park, Uganda”. PLANT ECOLOGY 178: 121-39. doi:10.1007/s11258-004-2562-z.
Zanne, Amy, CA Chapman, and K Kitajima. 2005. “Evolutionary and Ecological Correlates of Early Seedling Morphology in East African Trees and Shrubs”. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY 92: 972-78.
Chapman, CA, LJ Chapman, TT Struhsaker, Amy Zanne, CJ Clark, and . 2005. “A Long-Term Evaluation of Fruiting Phenology: Importance of Climate Change”. JOURNAL OF TROPICAL ECOLOGY 21: 31-45+. doi:10.1017/S0266467404001993.
Chapman, CA, LJ Chapman, K Vulinec, Amy Zanne, and MJ Lawes. 2003. “Fragmentation and Alteration of Seed Dispersal Processes: An Initial Evaluation of Dung Beetles, Seed Fate, and Seedling Diversity”. BIOTROPICA 35: 382-93.
Chapman, CA, LJ Chapman, Amy Zanne, and MA Burgess. 2002. “Does Weeding Promote Regeneration of an Indigenous Tree Community in Felled Pine Plantations in Uganda?”. RESTORATION ECOLOGY 10: 408-15.
Zanne, Amy, B Keith, CA Chapman, and LJ Chapman. 2001. “Protecting Terrestrial Mammal Communities: Potential Role of Pine Plantations”. AFRICAN JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY 39: 399-401+.
Zanne, Amy, and CA Chapman. 2001. “Expediting Reforestation in Tropical Grasslands: Distance and Isolation from Seed Sources in Plantations”. ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS 11: 1610-21.
Chapman, CA, LJ Chapman, L Kaufman, and Amy Zanne. 1999. “Potential Causes of Arrested Succession in Kibale National Park, Uganda: Growth and Mortality of Seedlings”. AFRICAN JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY 37: 81-92+.
Chapman, CA, RW Wrangham, LJ Chapman, DK Kennard, and Amy Zanne. 1999. “Fruit and Flower Phenology at Two Sites in Kibale National Park, Uganda”. JOURNAL OF TROPICAL ECOLOGY 15: 189-211+.
Wijas, Baptiste J. ", Steven D. Allison, Amy T. Austin, William K. Cornwell, Hans C. Cornelissen, Paul Eggleton, Shawn Fraver, et al. “‘The Role of Deadwood in the Carbon Cycle: Implications for Models, Forest Management, and Future Climates’”. "Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics". "Annual Reviews". doi:"https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-ecolsys-110421-102327".