History

Benjamin Turner

Staff Scientist

Benjamin Turner

e-mail: turnerbl@si.edu

Address: Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute
Apartado 0843-03092, Balboa, Ancón
Panamá, República de Panamá

Mail from the USA (DPO):
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute
Attn: Benjamin Turner
MRC 0580-12
Unit 9100 Box 0948
DPO AA 34002-9998
USA

Courier address:
Instituto Smithsonian de Investigaciones Tropicales
Edificio Tupper - 401
Balboa, Ancón
Panamá, República de Panamá

Web: Soil Laboratory Homepage

Telephone: +507 212-8171

FAX: +507 212-8148

 

Publications

LinkPublications by Benjamin Turner in STRI Bibliography

LinkPublications in PDF

Research Interests

Some of the most fascinating advances in our understanding of ecosystems are likely to occur at the interface between ecology and biogeochemistry. Recent discoveries, such as the regulation of species diversity in Arctic tundra by soil nitrogen composition, indicate the ecological importance of soil nutrient biogeochemistry. There is currently limited information for tropical forests, but given their remarkable diversity and the complex interactions that exist at all trophic levels, it seems certain that similar interactions occur.

Key research questions being addressed include:

  1. What forms of nutrients are present in tropical soils? How do their solubility and/or availability vary in time and space? Are there marked differences in nutrient availability that may partly explain above ground ecology?
  2. How do organisms access nutrients from tropical soils, especially organic nutrients? Likely mechanisms include secretion of phosphatase or organic anions, mycorrhizal association, and direct uptake of low molecular-weight organic compounds.
  3. Could the differential availability of nutrients based on the above mechanisms regulate species diversity?

Current Research

Education and Degrees

B.Sc., University of Sheffield, UK (1996).
Ph.D., University of London, UK (2000).

Selected Bibliography

Turner, B.L., Haygarth, P.M., 2001. Phosphorus solubilization in rewetted soils. Nature 411 (6835), 258.

Turner, B.L., Frossard, E., Baldwin, D.S. (eds), 2005. Organic Phosphorus in the Environment. CAB International, Wallingford, UK. 432 p.

Engelbrecht, B.M.J., Comita, L.S., Condit, R., Kursar, T.A., Tyree, M.T., Turner, B.L., Hubbell, S.P., 2007. Drought sensitivity shapes species distribution patterns in tropical forests. Nature 447 (7140), 80-82.

Turner, B.L., Richardson, A.E., Mullaney, E.J. (eds), 2007. Inositol Phosphates: Linking Agriculture and the Environment. CAB International, Wallingford, UK. 304 p.

Turner, B.L., 2008. Resource partitioning for soil phosphorus: a hypothesis. Journal of Ecology 96 (4), 698-702.