G. David Tilman
Regents' Professor
McKnight Presidential Chair in Ecology
Director of Cedar Creek Natural History Area
Dept. of Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior
Ph.D., University of Michigan, 1976
Contact Information
Office Phone: 612-625-5740
Fax: 612-624-6777
E-mail: tilman@umn.edu
Graduate Faculty Memberships
Conservation Biology; Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior; Microbial Ecology
Research Interests
Ecological effects of human domination of the earth, including effects on ecosystem services of value to society; the ecological mechanisms controlling speciation, community assembly, species invasions and the evolution and maintenance of biodiversity; population ecology and theory of community dynamics and biodiversity; role of resource competition; biodiversity and ecosystem functioning; effects of habitat destruction.
Statement
I am intrigued by the causes of broad, general patterns in the biological diversity, structure and dynamics of ecosystems, in the
benefits that society receives from natural and managed ecosystems, and in ways to assure environmental and social sustainability in
the face of global increases in human consumption and population. I recently have focused on a related issue - the effects of biodiversity
on the stability and functioning of ecosystems, which is scientifically intriguing and of great importance to society. Finally, I am
interested in the impacts of human domination of global ecosystems, especially in the impacts of nitrogen deposition, habitat
destruction/fragmentation, and invasive exotic species. I study mechanisms of resource competition among terrestrial plants, especially
in the grasslands of Minnesota's Cedar Creek Natural History Area. This work has focused on causes of succession and controls of both
diversity and species composition. My approach has been to combine well-replicated field experiments with mathematical theory. Some of the
questions we are currently exploring in field experiments are (1) the effects of plant diversity on ecosystem productivity, nutrient
retention, and stability; (2) the effects of community diversity on invasibility; (3) effects of diversity on disease dynamics and
herbivory, and the feedback effects of these on stability and productivity; (4) effects of nitrogen deposition on diversity, stability
and composition of grassland ecosystems; (5) the interactive effects of carbon dioxide, nitrogen deposition and plant diversity on primary
productivity and its stability; (6) effects of climate change on ecosystem composition, diversity and functioning; and (7) the role of
recruitment limitation in structuring plant communities. These collaborative projects take place at Cedar Creek and are supported by the
NSF Long-Term Ecological Research Program or the Bush Foundation.
Books
Tilman, D. 1982. Resource Competition and Community Structure. Monographs in Population Biology, Princeton University Press. 296 pp.
Tilman, D. 1988. Plant Strategies and the Dynamics and Structure of Plant Communities. Monographs in Population Biology, Princeton University Press. 360 pp.
Grace, J. and D. Tilman, Editors. 1990. Perspectives in Plant Competition. Academic Press, New York.
Tilman, D. and P. Karieva, Eds. 1997. Spatial Ecology: The Role of Space in Population Dynamics and Interspecific Interactions. Monographs in Population Biology, Princeton University Press. 368 pp.
Kinzig, A. P., S. W. Pacala and D. Tilman. 2002. Functional Consequences of Biodiversity: Empirical Progress and Theoretical Extensions. Princeton University Press, Princeton and Oxford.
Selected Publications
Fargione, J., J. Hill, D. Tilman, S. Polasky and P. Hawthorne. 2008. Land clearing and the biofuel carbon debt. Science 319: 1235-1238.
Clark, C.M. and D. Tilman. 2008. Loss of plant species after chronic low-level nitrogen deposition to prairie grasslands. nature 451:712-715.
Tilman, D., J. Hill and C. Lehman. 2006. Carbon-negative biofuels from low-input high-diversity grassland biomass. Science 314:1598-1600.
Tilman, D., P.B. Reich and J.M.H. Knops. 2006. Biodiversity and ecosystem stability in a decade-long grassland experiment. Nature 441:629-632.
Hill, J., E. Nelson, D. Tilman, S. Polasky and D Tiffany. 2006. Evironmental, economic, and energetic costs and benefits of biodiesel and ethanol biofuels. Proceedings fo the National Academy of Sciences 103:11206-11210.
Reich P.B., S.E. Hobbie, T. Lee, D.S. Ellsworth, J.B. West, D. Tilman, J.M.H. Knops, S. Naeem and J Trost. 2006. Nitrogen limitation constrains sustainability of ecosystem response to CO 2. Nature 440:922-925.
Tilman, D. 2004. Niche tradeoffs, neutrality, and community structure: A stochastic theory of resource competition, invasion, and community assembly. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 101:10854-10861.
Mitchell, C., D. Tilman and J. V. Groth. 2002. Effects of grassland plant species diversity, abundance, and composition on foliar fungal disease. Ecology 83:1713-1726.
Kennedy, T. A., S. Naeem, K. M. Howe, J. M. H. Knops, D. Tilman and P. Reich. 2002. Biodiversity as a barrier to ecological invasion. Nature 417:636-638.
Tilman, D., P. B. Reich, J. Knops, D. Wedin, T. Mielke and C. Lehman. 2001. Diversity and productivity in a long-term grassland experiment. Science 294:843-845.
Tilman, D., K. G. Cassman, P. A. Matson, R. Naylor and S. Polasky. 2002. Agricultural sustainability and intensive production practices. Nature 418:671-677.
Tilman, D., J. Fargione, B. Wolff, C. D'Antonio, A. Dobson, R. Howarth, D. Schindler, W. Schlesinger, D. Simberloff, D. Swackhamer. 2001. Forecasting Agriculturally Driven Global Environmental Change. Science 292:281-284.
Tilman, D. 2000. Causes, consequences and ethics of biodiversity. Nature 405:208-211.
Tilman, D. 1999. The ecological consequences of changes in biodiversity: a search for general principles. The Robert H. MacArthur Award Lecture. Ecology 80:1455-1474.
Tilman, D. 1998. The greening of the green revolution. Nature 396:211-212.
Cohen, J. E. and D. Tilman. 1996. Biosphere 2 and biodiversity: the lessons so far. Science 274:1150-1151.
Tilman, D. 1996. Biodiversity: Population versus ecosystem stability. Ecology 77(3):350-363.
Tilman, D., D. Wedin and J. Knops. 1996. Productivity and sustainability influenced by biodiversity in grassland ecosystems. Nature 379:718-720.
Wedin, D. A. and D. Tilman. 1996. Influence of nitrogen loading and species composition on the carbon balance of grasslands. Science 274:1720-1723.
Siemann, E., D. Tilman and J. Haarstad. 1996. Insect species diversity, abundance and body size relationships. Nature 380:704-706.
Cohen, J. E. and D. Tilman. 1996. Biosphere 2 and biodiversity: the lessons so far. Science 274:1150-1151.
Tilman, D. and J.A. Downing. 1994. Biodiversity and stability in grasslands. Nature 367:363-365.
Tilman, D., R.M. May, C.L. Lehman, and M.A. Nowak. 1994. Habitat destruction and the extinction debt. Nature 371:65-66.
Tilman, D. and A. El Haddi. 1992. Drought and biodiversity in grasslands. Oecologia 89:257-264.
Additional Links
My Biographical Sketch
My CV
Cedar Creek Ecosystem Science Reserve
IGERT Training Grant
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