William E. Winner

Professor,
Ph.D., 1978, University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada
winnerw@science.oregonstate.edu


 

 

Research Area

Analysis of plant-environment relationships; responses of plants to environmental stresses.

Description of Research

Work is underway to identify physiological principles of plant responses to environmental change. Emphasis is on probing responses of native plants and crops to environmental stresses resulting from changes in the availability of nutrients, water, light, carbon dioxide, and toxicity from air pollutants. Research involves crops, seedlings, and mature trees in controlled environment experiments developed in the laboratory and field. Concepts are emerging as to how plants respond to environmental factors in a "multiple stress" perspective. These concepts are useful for predicting plant response to environmental change and resource management.

Research Group Members

Graduate Students


Robert Coulombe (M.S.)
Valentina Fomenko (Ph.D.) 

Courses

BOT 479 Environmental Case Studies

BOT 488/588 Environmental Physiology of Plants

BOT 489/589 Analysis of Environmental Issues

Related Publications

Mooney, H.A., W.E. Winner and E.J. Pell (eds). 1990. Response of Plants to Multiple Stresses. Academic Press, 422 p.

Winner, W.E. 1994. Mechanistic analysis of plant responses to air pollution. Ecological Applications 4:651-661.

Griffin, K.L., W.E. Winner and B.R. Strain. 1995. Growth and dry matter partitioning in loblolly and ponderosa pine seedlings in response to carbon and nitrogen availability. New Phytol. 129:547-556.

Matyssek, R., P. Reich, R. Oren and W.E. Winner. 1995. Response mechanisms of conifers to air pollutants. Pages 255-308 in W.K. Smith and T.M. Hinckley (eds). Ecophysiology of Coniferous Forests. Academic Press, San Diego


   This document last updated: 03/03/04