Arctic Biology, Institute of
The Institute of Arctic Biology (IAB) is the principal research arm for life scientists in the College of Science, Engineering and Mathematics. The institute was established in 1963 through authorization from the Alaska Legislature, following the recommendation of a select committee of nationally and internationally recognized biologists. The original mandate of the institute, the study of physiological adaptations of plants, animals and humans to past and present climates of the Arctic, has been expanded to include well-developed programs in wildlife biology, ecology and systematics. Ecology programs include research on taiga and tundra sites, including community organization, ecosystem structure and function, functional interactions and interdependencies of plants and animals and the way in which environmental and organismal processes modify nutrient cycling and decomposition within systems. These studies on ecosystem research are closely tied to physiological and biochemical processes of microorganisms, plants and animals, emphasizing coevolved responses such as herbivory, which are supported through strong programs such as chemical ecology. Systematics of organisms within arctic and subarctic systems are being studied to establish mechanisms that provide for maintenance of heterogeneity in members of isolated communities. Additional research programs exist in population genetics, freshwater ecology, wildlife diseases, biochemistry and molecular biology.
Newly established biomedical research programs include the Center for Alaska Native Health Research, the Alaska Basic Neuroscience Program, and the Biological Research Infrastructure Network, which investigates effects of contaminants in subsistence foods.
The institute is located in the Irving Building and the Arctic Health Research Building and provides research laboratories for faculty and research associates, and for surgeries, vivaria and hibernacula for animal research. Special field sites include a 40-acre experimental biological reserve on campus and the R.G. White Large Animal Research Station, adjacent to the campus, which houses breeding colonies of muskoxen, caribou and reindeer. The institute maintains the only major ecological research station in the U.S. Arctic at Toolik Lake north of the Brooks Range, site of the Arctic Long-Term Ecological Research Program.