- Phil Ineson
Professor Phil Ineson is a Chair in Global Change Ecology at theUniversity of York . Ineson is particularly noted for his work withstable isotopes , and was the first to growC3 plants on C4 soil.Ineson received his BSc from Manchester Polytechnic in 1982, receiving a Ph.D. from the
University of Liverpool in 1986. He was then a NERCPost-Doctoral Research Assistant at theUniversity of Exeter until 1989. NERCResearch Fellow atITE Merlewood and laterSenior Scientific Officer (SSO). Between 1996 and 1999 he was at theCentre for Ecology and Hydrology , (CEH) Merlewood. Between 1998 and 2000 he was Visiting Professor atLancaster University . He was made Chair in Global Change Ecology at York in 2000.Ineson "et al" (1996) were able to track the movement of carbon through a plant by using the
stable isotope s ofcarbon , namely 12C and 13C. To obtain soil with a differentisotope ratio to normal, they obtainedsoil fromNorth America on whichC4 plants had been grown, giving it a different signature to soil on whichC3 plants . Comparisons of the signatures allowed the movement of carbon to be . This is now a commonly used technique (see e.g. Pataki "et al" (2003)) particularly useful in light of elevatedcarbon dioxide levels due to atmospheric pollution.References
*Ineson, P., Cotrufo, MF, Bol, R., Harkness, DD and Blum, H. (1996). Quantification of soil carbon inputs under elevated CO2: C3 plants in a C4 soil. "
Plant and Soil " 187:345-350
* Pataki "et al" (2003) Tracing changes in ecosystem function under elevated carbon dioxide conditions [http://www.uwyo.edu/terra/pdf/bioscience03.pdf pdf file]External links
* http://www.york.ac.uk/depts/biol/staff/pi.htm
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