UAF professor leads Arctic ecosystem science initiative

August 19, 2015

Sue Mitchell
907-474-5823

Vladimir Romanovsky, UAF professor of geophysics and head of the UAF Geophysical Institute Permafrost Laboratory.
Vladimir Romanovsky, UAF professor of geophysics and head of the UAF Geophysical Institute Permafrost Laboratory.


University of Alaska Fairbanks professor Vladimir Romanovsky has been named chief scientist for a U.S. Department of Energy initiative to study Arctic ecosystems.

The Next-Generation Ecosystem Experiments in the Arctic leadership team in May appointed Romanovsky to the role. Romanovsky is a professor of geophysics at the UAF Geophysical Institute.

“The NGEE project represents really good coordination for integrated field campaigns,” Romanovsky said. “I don’t know of any other project which has this kind of breadth and depth at the same time.”

“The ultimate goal is to improve climate models,” Romanovsky said. “But to make it possible to do that, more data about natural processes in the Arctic that is important for understanding climate need to be incorporated in the models. So, one of the goals of the project is to collect those data.”

The researchers involved with the multiphase and multidiscipline NGEE Arctic project, launched in 2012, are intensively investigating Arctic ecosystems, from the top of the vegetation canopy to bedrock. The project includes experiments and observations related to terrestrial hydrology, permafrost, vegetation, microbiology and biogeochemistry. The project includes 140 scientists from four DOE national laboratories, UAF and several other universities.

“Failure to identify and appropriately account for complexities at the landscape scale can compromise climate predictions,” wrote Stan Wullschleger, NGEE director, in the original project proposal.

NGEE Arctic represents a 10-year investment by the U.S. Department of Energy to improve climate models through coupled field, laboratory and modeling studies, with a budget of $10 million per year. For its contributions, UAF is allocated $1 million per year.

Approximately 20 researchers from the Geophysical Institute, International Arctic Research Center and the Institute of Arctic Biology are participating in the studies.

“If anybody plans to do any (scientific) work in the Arctic, they really need to collaborate with UAF in the project,” Romanovsky said. “UAF has experience in organizational logistics, local governments, local people. It’s always much easier for external institutions to take advantage of the pre-existing network UAF has developed. That’s part of why UAF was so involved in this project from the beginning.”

In his role as chief scientist, Romanovsky will provide guidance for questions related to development of proposals, work plans, field work and modelling planning and execution.

Romanovsky is a professor of geophysics and has been affiliated with UAF since 1992. His research interests are in the scientific and practical aspects of environmental and engineering problems involving ice and permafrost.

ON THE WEB:   http://ngee-arctic.ornl.gov/

http://web.ornl.gov/info/ornlreview/v47_1_14/article05.shtml

http://permafrost.gi.alaska.edu/users/vromanovsky

http://permafrostwatch.org

ADDITIONAL CONTACT: Vladimir Romanovsky, veromanovsky@alaska.edu, 907-474-7459.