
Christopher Field, PhD
Professor of Biology, Professor of Environmental Earth Science, FSI Senior Fellow, by courtesyCarnegie Institution of Washington
260 Panama Street
Stanford, CA 94305
Research Interests
Ecosystem responses to global climate change, plant ecophysiology
Chris Field is the director of the Carnegie Institution's Department of Global Ecology, Professor of Biology, Professor of Environmental Earth System Science, and FSI Senior Fellow, by courtesy, Stanford University.
Trained as an ecologist, Chris has conducted environmental research from tropical rainforests to deserts to alpine tundra in the Americas, Asia, Africa, and Australia. He is a specialist in global-change research. He has developed an evolutionary approach to understanding the spatial organization of plant canopies and the adaptive significance of leaf aging. These studies led to work on the role of nitrogen in regulating plant growth and photosynthsis. They also suggested ways that plant physiological responses could be summarized with a few parameters, providing a basis for predicting many aspects of ecosystem function at very large scales.
Recently, he has emphasized formalizing approaches for summarizing plant responses into models that simulate ecosystem exchanges of carbon, water, and energy at the global scale. These models, which synthesize surface data on climate and soils, satellite data on vegetation type and canopy development, and functional generalizations from physiology and ecology, help test hypotheses and understand the future status of terrestrial ecosystems, especially responses to and influences on global change factors like increased atmospheric carbon dioxide or altered climate.
Field is active in developing the international community of global change researchers, with involvement in organizations like SCOPE, IGBP, and the Global Carbon Project. An author or more than 100 scientific papers, he is a member of the US National Academy of Sciences and a leader in several national and international efforts to provide the scientific foundation for a sustainable future.
Stanford Departments
Biological Sciences
Other affiliations
Professor of Biology, Professor of Environmental Earth System Science, FSI Senior Fellow, by courtesy
Publications
The global potential of bioenergy on abandoned agricultural lands
J Elliott Campbell, David Lobell, Robert Genova, Christopher Field
Environmental Science and Technology (2008)
Estimation of the carbon dioxide (CO2) fertilization effect using growth rate anomalies of CO2 and crop yields since 1961
David Lobell, Christopher Field
Global Change Biology vol. 14 (2008)
Historical effects of temperature and precipitation on California crop yields
David Lobell, Kimberly Cahill, Christopher Field
Climatic Change vol. 81, 2 (2007)
Global scale climate-crop yield relationships and the impacts of recent warming
David Lobell, Christopher Field
Environmental Research Letters vol. 2 (2007)
Impacts of future climate change on California perennial crop yields
David Lobell, Christopher Field, Kimberly Cahill, Celine Bonfils
Agricultural and Forest Meteorology vol. 141, 2-4 (2006)

