Matthew Bracken

Picture of Matthew Bracken
Professor, Ecology & Evolutionary Biology
School of Biological Sciences
Ph.D., Oregon State University, 2003, Zoology
Phone: (949) 824-6976
Fax: (949) 824-2181
Email: m.bracken@uci.edu
University of California, Irvine
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
321 (mail) & 457 (office) Steinhaus Hall
University of California
Mail Code: 2525
Irvine, CA 92697
Research Interests
Causes and consequences of changes in marine biodiversity
Academic Distinctions
Visiting Erskine Fellow, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand (2015)
Scientist in Residency Fellow, Sitka Sound Science Center, Alaska (2014)
Appointments
Northeastern University (Associate and Assistant Professor, 2007-2013)
Bodega Marine Laboratory (Postdoctoral Scholar, 2005-2007)
University of California Davis (Postdoctoral Scholar, 2004-2005)
University of Canterbury (Visiting Postdoctoral Researcher, 2003-2004)
Oregon State University (Postdoctoral Research Associate, 2003)
Research Abstract
The Bracken lab group uses an interdisciplinary approach to evaluate the linkages between marine communities and ecosystems. We draw from a variety of ecological sub-disciplines, including community ecology, physiological ecology, and ecosystem ecology. Current projects in the lab address two related concepts in marine ecology that merge community and ecosystem perspectives: (1) evaluating the causes and consequences of biodiversity change and (2) quantifying the relative importance of consumers’ top-down and bottom-up effects on the growth and diversity of primary producers.
Publications
(selected, from past 10 years; * indicates undergraduate co-author; † indicates grad student co-author)
Sorte, C.J.B., K.J. Kroeker, L.P. Miller, & M.E.S. Bracken. 2023. Biological modification of coastal pH depends on community composition and time. Ecology 104: e4113.
Bedgood, S.A.†, S.T. Levell, & M.E.S. Bracken. 2023. Sea anemone microhabitats enhance the diversity and biomass of mobile invertebrates on temperate rocky shores. Marine Ecology Progress Series 715: 57-68.
Bracken, M.E.S., L.P. Miller, S.E. Mastroni, S.M. Lira*, & C.J.B. Sorte. 2022. Accounting for variation in temperature and oxygen availability when quantifying marine ecosystem metabolism. Scientific Reports 12: 825.
Elsberry, L.A.† and M.E.S. Bracken. 2021. Functional redundancy buffers mobile invertebrates against the loss of foundation species on rocky shores. Marine Ecology Progress Series 673: 43-54.
Roberts, E.A.† and M.E.S. Bracken. 2021. Intertidal canopy-forming seaweeds modulate understory seaweed photoprotective compounds. Journal of Phycology 57: 645-654.
Bracken, M.E.S. 2020. Complementarity in spatial subsidies of carbon associated with resource partitioning along multiple niche axes. Oecologia 193:425-436.
Bedgood, S.A.†, S.E. Mastroni, and M.E.S. Bracken. 2020. Flexibility of nutritional strategies within a mutualism: food availability affects algal symbiont productivity in two congeneric sea anemone species. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 287: 20201860.
Bracken, M.E.S., J.M. Oates*, A.J. Badten*, and G. Bernatchez. 2018. Predicting rates of consumer-mediated nutrient cycling by a diverse herbivore assemblage. Marine Biology 165:165.
Bracken, M.E.S., J.G. Douglass, V. Perini† , and G.C. Trussell. 2017. Spatial scale mediates the effects of biodiversity on marine primary producers. Ecology 98:1434-1443.
Bracken, M.E.S., R.E. Dolecal, and J.D. Long. 2014. Community context mediates the top-down versus bottom-up effects of grazers on rocky shores. Ecology 95: 1458-1463.
Last updated
03/26/2024