Tana Wood


Tana Elaine Wood is a biogeochemist and ecosystem scientist with a focus in land-use and climate change. Her research is focused on looking into how these issues affect tropical forested ecosystems and particularly focuses on soil science and below ground research efforts.

Early life

Wood attended the University of Texas Austin for her undergraduate studies. She received a B.S. in Ecology, Evolution and Conservation Biology in 1997. She received an M.S. in Environmental Sciences in 2003 from the University of Virginia. She later received a Ph.D. in Environmental Sciences from the University of Virginia in 2006.

Career and research

Wood currently works as a Research Ecologist for the U.S. Forest Service. She also works for the Tropical Responses to Altered Climate Experiment as the first on-site scientist and leads research under the ground. Her graduate research was focused around the importance and effects of litter in tropical forests. It culminated with her thesis, The importance of litter to ecosystem function in a wet tropical forest; Environmental and physiological controls on nutrient resorption of nine tropical tree species. In 2007, she held a position as a postgraduate researcher at the University of California, Berkeley in the Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management. Her main field of expertise is in soil science of tropical forests. She is known for her research in the field of soil science as well as her writing on the issue of ecosystem manipulation. Her research has been funded by the United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service and Luquillo Long Term Ecological research as well as the United States Department of Energy.

Publications

Wood has published several highly cited scientific articles. Her work focuses on soil in tropical forests thus her published article focus mostly on soil in tropical forests. Her highly cited works include research on increased experimenting in tropical forests, changing soil moisture and its effect on microbial content, the effect that tropical forests have on carbon regulation, variability in litter and weather patterns affects nutrients in the soil, and how nutrient cycles can be affected by environmental changes. Her highly cited articles include: