Marian Schmidt
Assistant Professor, Microbiology
Pronouns: they/them
I am a microbial ecologist and evolutionary biologist who studies the diversity, structure, and genome dynamics of freshwater microbial communities.
Climate change dramatically impacts freshwater ecosystems, which are becoming warmer, more acidic, and nutrient rich. The collective influence of the microbial inhabitants of these ecosystems, despite their tiny size, can have an immense impact on water quality. Microbes may cause lake-wide harmful cyanobacterial blooms, the partial or complete deoxygenation of bottom waters in lakes, and their activity helps to determine whether a lake is a source or sink of carbon.
Despite their large impact, we lack fundamental knowledge on the ecology and evolution of these aquatic microbial systems. Therefore, research in the lab focuses on how aquatic environments and microhabitats influence microbial community diversity, composition, metabolic activity, and evolution. To address these topics, our lab uses a combination of field work, molecular methods, and computational tools.
Publications
For an updated list of Marian's publications, please check out their google scholar page.
Contact Information
Ithaca, NY 14853
marschmi [at] cornell.edu
Marian in the news
News
Steve Grodsky, assistant professor of natural resources, and a multidisciplinary team of researchers, soon will learn how solar panels placed on top of water bodies can affect the biology of aquatic systems.
- Cornell Atkinson
- Lab of Ornithology
- Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
News
Cornell Atkinson has awarded seed funding to nine interdisciplinary projects that address a range of sustainability topics.
- Animal Science
- Biological and Environmental Engineering
- Charles H. Dyson School of Applied Economics and Management