Dr. Stephen Boahen Asabere
Akademische Rat a.Z. | Non-tenured Assistant Professor
To effectively confront urgent environmental issues like urban sprawl, unsustainable agriculture, and global change stressors, it is important to comprehend the processes that underlie landscape and soil patterns. This entails studying the interactions and feedback loops between biogeochemical cycles, including those of carbon (C), nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), and silicon (Si), alongside processes like soil formation and transformation. Such analyses are essential for refining predictive models of how human activities influence ecosystem services and functions. My research adopts an interdisciplinary approach, spanning various ecosystems, and utilizing techniques such as geospatial modeling, field data collection, and laboratory testing of soil and plant samples. The scope of my work includes both tropical and temperate environments, covering urban areas, resource-limited agroecosystems, forests, grasslands, and alpine mountain regions.
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