
School of Sustainability
Arizona State University
PO Box 875502
Tempe, AZ 85287
Phone:
(480) 727-6963
Fax:
480-965-8087
Email:
david.iwaniec@asu.edu
Iwaniec, D., D. Childers, D. Rondeau and C. Madden. 2006. Effects of hydrologic and water quality drivers on periphyton dynamics in the southern Everglades. Hydrobiologia 569:273.
Hale, R. L., E. M. Cook, D. M. Iwaniec and N. B. Grimm. in press. Urbanization and the altered biogeochemical cycle. In: X. Bai, T. Graedel and A. Morishima. eds., Cities in Evolution: Urbanization, Environmental Change and Sustainability. Cambridge University Press.
Cook, E., B. Cutts, R. Hale, D. Iwaniec, M. Romolini, K. Schwarz, J. Munyon, G. Koch and G. Losada. 2009. Identifying the benefits and barriers to graduate student cross-site socio-ecological research in urban systems. Poster presented at the September 14-16, 2009, 2009 LTER All Scientist Meeting, Integrating Science and Society in a World of Constant Change, Estes Park, CO.
Cook, E., R. Hale, D. Iwaniec, J. Corman, X. Dong, G. Metson and J. Sayles. 2010. Urban stoichiometry: An elemental approach to understanding human-environment interactions. Poster presented at the January 14, 2010 12th Annual Central Arizona-Phoenix Long-Term Ecological Research Poster Symposium, Global Institute of Sustainability.
Metson, G., J. Corman, E. Cook, R. Hale, D. Iwaniec and C. Galletti. 2011. Nutrient movements in human environment interactions: Phosphorus in Phoenix. Poster presented at the 12-13 January 2011 CAP LTER 13th Annual Poster Symposium and All Scientist Meeting, Global Institute of Sustainability, Arizona State University.
Established in 2007, the School of Sustainability brings together multiple disciplines and leaders to create and share knowledge, train a new generation of scholars and practitioners, and develop practical solutions to the most pressing environmental, economic, and social challenges of sustainability - especially as they relate to urban areas.