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Frank S. Gilliam
Professor of Biological Sciences B.S., Vanderbilt University, 1976
Ph.D., Duke University, 1983
Phone: (304) 696-3636
FAX: (304) 696-3243
E-mail: gilliam@marshall.edu
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This
ribbon is a show of support of not only the United States of America, but also
for the fight for freedom throughout the world.
In the memory of the faculty and students at Virginia Tech who died tragically
through senseless acts of violence, 16 April 2007. Though their voices
have been silenced, their spirits still sing.
I have been a member of the faculty since 1990 and teach courses in ecology and plant ecology. My research interests perhaps can be described best as broad-based within the general area of plant ecology, as may be seen in my publication record, with papers published in at least 23 different journals. Most of what I do lies at the boundary between the levels of terrestrial plant communities and ecosystems. I am particularly interested in the movement and cycling of plant nutrients within terrestrial ecosystems. Directly related to this are interests in fire ecology and the effects of fire on nutrient cycling and on plants and soils in fire-prone ecosystems. Also related to my ecosystem approach to ecological research is an interest in atmospheric deposition and precipitation chemistry. This interest has led to the study of pollutant conditions (acid deposition and ozone) in forested areas.
My interests at the level of the plant community are focused predominantly on forest community ecology. I am particularly interested in secondary succession and the species dynamics of the herbaceous layer of forests, as well as the variety of biotic and abiotic factors that influence species composition and change within this vegetation stratum. My future research plans reflect extensions of previous work in the following three areas: (1) vegetation dynamics in forest ecosystems, (2) nitrogen dynamics of forest ecosystems, and (3) species composition and stand structure in old-growth longleaf pine forests.
Forest vegetation
Much of my current work, as an extension of earlier research in other forest types, is focused on factors that affect the herbaceous layer (vascular plants <1 m in height) of central Appalachian hardwood forests. Recent work, carried out at the Fernow Experimental Forest (FEF), West Virginia, has generated the hypothesis that herb layer development is nutrient-limited early in secondary succession following forest disturbance, but becomes light-limited later in succession. My future research plans include testing this hypothesis further experimentally in other forest types.
Fernow Experimental Forest 
Work at this same site has generated another hypothesis concerning successional changes in the herbaceous layer of hardwood forests, one that has important implications for ecosystem management of forests and its effects on plant diversity. This hypothesis states that 1) the temporal shift in processes which control species composition following disturbance (from allogenic to autogenic factors) leads to a linkage in species composition between the overstory and herbaceous strata, and 2) the degree to which forest management alters species composition of forest ecosystems may by tied to the degree of alteration of the link between strata. I recently completed a book (with Dr. Mark R. Roberts of the University of New Brunswick, Canada) that examines the ecology of the herbaceous layer in forests of eastern North America (see below).
Nitrogen dynamics
Another area of current research interest and activity is focused on nitrogen (N) dynamics in a central Appalachian hardwood forest. Most of my time is spent on testing several hypotheses concerning the phenomenon known as N saturation, which posits that, for impacted forests in parts of Europe and North America, N inputs associated with acidic deposition are exceeding demand of N by the biota. This work involves in situ incubations of mineral soil and organic horizons to examine soil N dynamics in a treatment watershed (receiving aerial N additions to the entire watershed) and two untreated control watersheds of differing stand ages. Annual and seasonal patterns of soil N dynamics are related to watershed differences in canopy and herbaceous layer tissue N and in stream chemistry. Results to date have shown that several watersheds of FEF have become N saturated from high levels of ambient N deposition.
In collaboration with Dr. Mary Beth Adams of the USDA Forest Service, I have recently expanded the questions of N saturation in montane hardwood forests to include the interactive effects of forest harvesting and N saturation on forest soil sustainability and productivity. A major threat to sustainability in central Appalachian forests is the loss of base cations via biomass removal and leaching. Future plans include continuing this work for several years.
Some of this work is summarized in various chapters in a book recently published by Springer. Click on the image of the book's cover to go to the book's web page at Amazon.
Old-growth longleaf pine
I initiated a long-term study of species composition and stand structure of the Boyd Tract in the Sandhills region of North Carolina in 1989. The Boyd Tract, part of Weymouth Woods-Sandhills Nature Preserve, is unique as a longleaf pine study site for two reasons. First, at approximately 66 ha, it is the largest stand of old-growth longleaf pine the state, indeed, one of the larger stands anywhere. Second, as of the initiation of the study, the Boyd Tract had not experienced significant fire (an environmental requirement for longleaf pine regeneration) for more than 80 years. Thus, this site has provided the opportunity to study a longleaf pine stand that has not experienced the disturbance of forest harvesting, but has experienced the disturbance of chronic fire exclusion. Results to date indicate that species composition under these conditions is closely related to soil variables (e.g., texture, moisture, and nutrients). Furthermore, higher clay content soils have allowed the development of a forest type more closely resembling those of the adjacent North Carolina Piedmont than those typical of the Sandhills.
Boyd Tract, NC

Future work will look more closely at the age distributions of longleaf pine stems of the Boyd Tract. In addition, future work will examine the relationships between longleaf stem age and stem size along an elevation/texture gradient and will use these relationships as basis for comparison (in collaboration with Dr. Bill Platt of Louisiana State University) to those of another old-growth longleaf stand, the Wade Tract of southern Georgia.
I am co-author of a textbook on the ecology of terrestrial plants. I use this book as a text for my course here at Marshall UniversityPlant Ecology (BSC 430/530).
I co-edited the following book published by Oxford University Press.
Note: Names appearing in bold print are student co-authors.
Papers
Lu X, Mo J, Gilliam FS, Zhou G, and Fang Y. 2008. Effects of experimental nitrogen deposition on plant diversity in an old-growth tropical forest. Journal of Ecology (submitted).Bobbink R, K Hicks, J Galloway, T Spranger, R Alkemade, M Ashmore, M Bustamante, S Cinderby, E Davidson, F Dentener, B Emmett, J-W Erisman, M Fenn, F Gilliam, A Nordin, L Pardo and W de Vries. 2008. Global assessment of nitrogen deposition effects on terrestrial plant diversity effects of terrestrial ecosystems: a synthesis. Ecological Applications (submitted).
Gilliam FS, JT Sigmon, MA Reiter, and DO Krovetz. 1989. Elevational and spatial variation in daytime ozone concentrations in the Virginia Blue Ridge Mountains: implications for forest exposure. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 19:422-426.
Sigmon JT, FS Gilliam, and ME Parton. 1989. Precipitation and throughfall chemistry for a montane hardwood forest ecosystem: potential contributions from cloud water. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 19:1240-1247.
Gilliam FS and DD Richter. 1988. Correlations between extractable Na, K, Mg, Ca, P and N from fresh and dried samples of two Aquults. Journal of Soil Science 39:209-214.
Gilliam FS and DD Richter. 1985. Increases in extractable ions in infertile Aquults caused by sample preparation. Soil Science Society of America Journal 49:1576-1578.
Schlesinger WH, JT Gray, and FS Gilliam. 1982. Atmospheric deposition processes and their importance as sources of nutrients in a chaparral ecosystem of southern California. Water Resources Research 18:623-629.
PROCEEDINGS AND BOOK CHAPTERS
Gilliam FS. 1995. Changes in soil physical and chemical characteristics. Chapter 5, pp. 55-69, In: DK Evans and HA Allen, editors. Mitigation wetland restoration: environmental effects at Green Bottom Wildlife Management Area, West Virginia. Technical Report WRP-RE-10, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Waterways Experiment Station, Vicksburg, MS.
Gilliam FS and MA Fisher. 1995. Nitrogen transformations. Chapter 6, pp. 70-76, In: DK Evans and HA Allen, editors. Mitigation wetland restoration: environmental effects at Green Bottom Wildlife Management Area, West Virginia. Technical Report WRP-RE-10, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Waterways Experiment Station, Vicksburg, MS.
Gilliam FS. 1991. Ecosystem-level significance of acid forest soils. pp 187-195. In: RJ Wright, VC Baligar, and RP Murrmann, editors. Plant-soil interactions at low pH. Dordrecht, The Netherlands: Kluwer Academic Publishers. 1104 pp.
Gilliam FS. 1991. The significance of fire in an oligotrophic forest ecosystem. pp 113-122. In: SC Nodvin and TA Waldrop, editors. Fire and the environment: ecological and cultural perspectives: Proceedings of an international symposium. Gen. Tech. Rep. SE-69. Ashville, NC: USDA, Forest Service, Southeastern Forest Experiment Station. 429 pp.
I have been a member of the Ecological Society of America since 1982.
Teaching:
I primarily teach three courses here in the Department of Biological Sciences at Marshall University:
Principles of Biology (BSC 121):
Principles of Ecology (BSC 320): Note that I teach this in the Fall semester with Dr. Jeff May. Here is the link to his web page: http://webpages.marshall.edu/~may/bsc320.html
Sample statistics question for Examination II
Lectures: Introduction/principles (26 August 2008)
Energy in Organisms (4 September 2008)
Temperature (11 September 2008)
Population Ecology--Introduction (23 September 2008)
Intraspecific Population Regulation (25 September 2008)
Interspecific competition (2 & 7 October 2008)
Symbioses: Commensalism, Parasitism, and Mutualism (16 October 2008)
Community Ecology: Concepts and Community Structure (23 October 2008)
Biogeochemical cycling (11 November 2008)
Global environmental problems I (18 November 2008)
Global environmental problems III (4 December 2008)
Forest community data: Section 101
Lemna experiment data: All sections
Writing Title and Methods Section
Additional material to assist in writing: Writing Results and Discussion Formatting References Lab Reports--General Requirements
Example: Title and Methods for HMA Forest study
Lemna paper: General Requirements
Writing is a very important part of the scientific process. I stress writing in my classes. In this section, one will find useful links/items that should be helpful when writing scientific papers/reports.
Here is a very useful paper as a general reference on how to write scientific papers (HIGHLY RECOMMENDED): Carraway (2006)
Here is a link for the classic writing manual, Elements of Style, by Strunk and White: Elements of Style
Click here (http://www.marshall.edu/library/guides/bsc320.asp) to go to a useful webpage (webpage prepared by Ron Titus, Electronic Services Librarian & Biology Subject Specialist) for using on-line resources through Drinko Library.
Plant Ecology (BSC 430/530):
Biology Club
I serve as faculty advisor for the Biology Club. Please follow this link to go the web page: Biology Club. If you are a biology major at Marshall University, or just a student who is interested in biology in general, please consider joining us.
Personal Interests:
Outside of my professional interests in science, biology in general and plant ecology in particular, I am interested in several enjoyable activities, including basketball, tennis, wine, reading, and photography. More important than any of these professional or personal activities and interests is the honor I have of these is being the father of two great children--17-yr old Rachel and 14-yr old Ian.

Ian Stuart Gilliam Rachel MacKenzie Gilliam
I am also the husband of a wonderful woman, Laura.
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Laura Pleasants Gilliam
Laura holds the position of Executive Director of the United Way of the River Cities, Inc..
I am an Elder at Enslow Park Presbyterian Church.
One of my more passionate "hobbies" is NCAA basketball--two teams in particular. As a result of growing up in Lexington, Kentucky, I am a big fan of the University of Kentucky Wildcat basketball team.
Also, as a graduate of Duke University (see above), I am equally as big a fan of the Duke University Blue Devil basketball team.