Mission Statement

The Department of Functional and Evolutionary Ecology within the Faculty of Life Sciences aims at a mechanistic understanding of ecological and evolutionary patterns and processes from organismic to ecosystem scale. Specifically, we study and teach biodiversity, symbioses, metabolic pathways, ecophysiology and ecosystem functioning in light of environmental change.

Units

Archaea Biology and Ecogenomics

Christa Schleper - Archaea Ecology and Evolution
Silvia Bulgheresi - Environmental Cell Biology
Simon Rittmann - Archaea Physiology & Biotechnology
Filipa Sousa - Genome Evolution and Ecology

Limnology

Christian Griebler - Groundwater Ecology
Katrin Attermeyer - Carbocrobe
Hubert Keckeis - Fish Ecology
Michael Schagerl - Phycology

 

 

Molecular Systems Biology

Wolfram Weckwerth - Systems Theory in Ecology and Biology
Palak Chaturvedi - Crops in a Changing Climate Environment
Verena Ibl - Cell biology in Crop Seeds
Ingeborg Lang - Structural and functional plant cell biology
Markus Teige - Plant signalling
Steffen Waldherr - Computational methods for systems biology
Stefanie Wienkoop - Plant-Microsymbiont Interaction


Bio-Oceanography and Marine Biology

Monika Bright - Marine Benthic Ecology
Federico Baltar - Fungal and Biogeochemical Oceanography
Gerhard Herndl - Microbial Oceanography
Thomas Reinthaler - Marine Microbial Biogeochemistry

News

29.04.2021
 

Congratulations Philipp!

26.04.2021
 

Panel-Diskussion: "What should be the role of universities in fighting the climate crisis? Does TU Wien do enough?"

15.04.2021
 

This publication sheds light on biases involved in estimating the degradability of organic matter in aquatic systems

14.04.2021
 

Our university is currently presenting early stage researchers via video portraits.

Johannes Herpell is a member of the Vienna Doctoral School of...

13.04.2021
 

Ökosysteme schützen: Was ist los mit dem Stickstoffkreislauf? Und was können wir tun?

13.04.2021
 

"Microscopic Methods for Identification of Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria from Various Habitats"