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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Monday, July 15, 2002
Sheryl
Lichtig Wyan
UC Merced
Office of Communications
(209) 724-4408
sheryl.lichtig@ucop.edu
SCIENTIST
WITH VALLEY ROOTS SELECTED TO ESTABLISH UC MERCED RESEARCH INSTITUTE
MERCED
- Stanislaus County native Samuel J. Traina, Ph.D., a highly respected
environmental scientist, has been appointed as Founding Director
of the Sierra Nevada Research Institute at the University of California,
Merced.
Prior
to beginning his UC Merced duties on July 1, 2002, Traina was a
professor of soil physical chemistry in the School of Natural Resources,
a professor of environmental science, a professor of geological
sciences and co-director of the Environmental Molecular Science
Institute at The Ohio State University. In addition, the Patterson
native was awarded a Soil Science Society of America fellowship
in 2001.
Supported
by more than $8 million in federal grants over his career to date,
Traina's current research focuses on the fate and impact of pollutants
in soils, sediments and natural waters and remediation of contaminated
soils and sediments. Most recently he was named as co-principal
investigator for Ohio State's new $5.8 million National Science
Foundation center to study soil, sediment and aerosol pollutants
and received several grants from the U.S. Department of Energy to
research methods to clean up soils contaminated by nuclear weapons
production.
"Sam
Traina comes to UC Merced with superior credentials as both a teacher
and researcher in the natural and environmental sciences,"
said UC Merced Chancellor Carol Tomlinson-Keasey. "He brings
a proven ability to develop partnerships for research, an interdisciplinary
approach and a thorough understanding of the environmental issues
facing our region, all of which are critical to the successful establishment
of our first signature research institute."
As
director of the Sierra Nevada Research Institute (SNRI), Traina
is working closely with the Deans of Engineering and Natural Sciences
to recruit the faculty who will hold appointments in the academic
divisions and will have affiliations with UC Merced's research institutes,
including the SNRI. According to Provost and Executive Vice Chancellor
David Ashley, the visibility of the SNRI has been a particularly
strong attraction for many prospective faculty in both the Natural
Science and Engineering Divisions.
Related
priorities are recruiting students for Institute-based research
activities and contributing to the development of graduate programs
compatible with the Institute's areas of research. Exploring the
public and private funding sources to support future research projects
is another of Traina' responsibilities.
His
initial goals also include building and expanding relationships
with University of California research units, UC-managed Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory, and state and federal natural resource
and agricultural agencies for collaborative research and education.
Primary among UC Merced’s existing partnerships for regionally
based research is that with Yosemite, Sequoia and Kings Canyon National
Parks. Efforts are under way to develop similar relationships with
agriculture and natural resources groups in the San Joaquin Valley.
"The
Sierra Nevada and the San Joaquin Valley form a wonderful, natural
laboratory with a wealth of geological, ecological and cultural
diversity within a relatively small area," Traina said. "This
enables UC Merced to create new knowledge which will be based on
research conducted in the region and broadly applicable to a range
of environments around the nation and world."
Envisioning
a wide array of Institute-based research, Traina said the public
can expect to see a concerted effort by UC Merced to focus study
on local ecological and environmental issues that directly impact
their lives. Quality of water and air, land-use impacts, soil quality,
impacts and timing of control burns, and the effect of population
growth on agricultural and natural ecosystems offer a sampling of
potential topics for study. Additionally, the SNRI will serve as
a nexus for investigators from around the country who wish to pursue
research in the Sierra and the San Joaquin Valley.
According
to Traina, the Sierra Nevada Research Institute is poised to explore
such new frontiers of scientific research as the role of the global
carbon cycle in climate change, which is garnering strong interest
from federal agencies.
"Extensive
research has indicated that carbon dioxide may have a major effect
on climate change," Traina said. "Further study of the
natural carbon cycle could indicate methods to store carbon in soils
or other parts of natural and agricultural ecosystems, slowing climate
change and positively impacting those ecosystems."
He
plans to organize the Institute around an earth-systems science
model and to employ a broad-based approach to research, building
innovative teams that blend investigators from an array of disciplines.
These teams of students and faculty will work on issues pertinent
to sustaining California’s agricultural and natural resources.
"The
opportunity to cultivate a natural culture of multidisciplinary
education and research at UC Merced and the opportunity to create
a brand new research institute at this campus are very attractive.
I am doing the kind of work I love and I can't imagine a better
place to do that work than UC Merced, which has brought me back
home to my family in the Valley and to the Sierra Nevada, where
I used to spend part of my summers," Traina said. "As
a UC alumnus and former UC research assistant, I have a strong affinity
for the University of California and am pleased to be in a position
to give back to the system."
Traina
received his bachelor's degree in soil resource management and his
doctorate in soil chemistry from UC Berkeley, where he also served
as a graduate research assistant and graduate teaching assistant.
Immediately following, he moved to UC Riverside to conduct postdoctoral
research and work as an assistant research soil chemist in the Department
of Soil and Environmental Sciences.
First
hired by Ohio State as an assistant professor of soil physical chemistry
in the College of Agriculture, Traina also served as director of
the Graduate Program in Environmental Sciences, chair of the University
Research Committee and chair of the Graduate School Curriculum Committee
during his tenure at the university.
Among
the honors he has received, Traina was named as a Cox Visiting Professor
in the School of Earth Sciences at Stanford University and received
the Distinguished Multidisciplinary Team Research Award and the
Distinguished Research Award from the Ohio Agricultural Research
and Development Center. He has authored several book chapters and
monographs, as well as approximately 100 refereed publications.
Traina
also has served on several research panels for the U.S. Department
of Energy, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the National
Academy of Science/National Research Council and has a strong record
of society service.
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NOTE TO EDITORS/REPORTERS: Electronic image of SNRI Director
Samuel Traina available upon request by contacting Melanie Horn
at 209.724.4432 or by email at Melanie.Horn@ucop.edu.
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