Professor James Tiedje, Distinguished Professor of microbiology
and Director of the Center for Microbial Ecology at Michigan State University,
was elected to the National Academy of Sciences on April 27, 2003. Prof.
Tiedje is internationally recognized for research on understanding the
ecology, physiology, and molecular biology of microbial processes. He is
a member of the Biological and Environmental Research Advisory Committee
(BERAC) and a key contributor to several BER programs. His research in
the
Natural and Accelerated Bioremediation Research
Program has increased our understanding of microbial communities at
DOE legacy waste sites and their potential for bioremediation. Dr. Tiedje
has also made important contributions to the Biotechnological Investigations-Ocean
Margins Program (BI-OMP) where he has developed and applied elegant DNA-based
technologies to study the linkages between carbon and nitrogen cycles in
nearshore marine sediments. Dr. Tiedje is also the President-elect of the
American Society for Microbiology, one of the largest scientific societies
in the U.S. Election to membership in the National Academy of Sciences
is considered to be one of the highest honors that can be accorded to a
U.S. scientist.
Back to ERSD News
5/7/03