McCary Lab Website
Our lab investigates the fundamental drivers and consequences of global change on ecosystems, with a particular interest in disentangling the relationship between soil biodiversity and ecosystem functioning. Our research goals aim to address fundamental ecological questions, socio-ecological interactions in urban environments, and issues relating to conservation, restoration, and environmental justice. We strive to conduct our work in an ethical manner while using different platforms to communicate our research findings.
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Related resources (by topic)
‘1.5°C to stay alive’: climate change, imperialism and justice for the Caribbean
Treating the threat of climate change in the Caribbean as a case study instructive for responses globally, this article examines the social and political relations of climate change. It argues for an analysis taking into account the ways in which…
“Hidden” biodiversity: a new amphipod genus dominates epifauna in association with a mesophotic black coral forest
Black corals are important components of mesophotic and deep-water marine habitats. Their presence at great depths (e.g., 50 to 200 m) makes accessibility difficult, limiting our understanding of the associated biodiversity. Amphipods dominate vagile epifauna in marine habitats around the…
1.5°C National Pathway Explorer
In this project, Climate Analytics uses IPCC 1.5°C compatible pathways in combination with more recent lines of scientific evidence to show how a selection of 64 countries across all regions and the development spectrum can align their decarbonisation trajectories with the Paris…
10 Black Conservationists Who Made History
We’ve been entrusted with a planet that’s full of diverse plant and animal life, but it takes effort from all of us if we want to keep it that way. Development, population growth, and climate change all threaten a wide…
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