KBS grad student earn awards for national energy research for harnessing soil microbes

Brandon Kristy, a Ph.D. student in the Department of Integrative Biology and a member of the Evans Lab at the Kellogg Biological Station, will go to Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, or LLNL, to study the “unseen” partners of sustainable bioenergy.Kristy’s specialty is plant science for sustainable bioenergy, where he investigates how soil microbiomes can help crops like switchgrass thrive without relying on excessive chemical fertilizers.

Kristy’s work underscores how MSU graduate students are leveraging national resources to turn fundamental scientific inquiry into real-world solutions.

“Bioenergy crops are a major solution to climate change, but managing them can result in fertilizer waste and runoff,” Kristy said. “Amazingly, microbes in the soil can make their own fertilizer. I am interested in exploring how plant-symbiotic fungi can team up with nitrogen-fixing bacteria to provide more nitrogen to these crops naturally.”

At LLNL, Kristy will use cutting-edge nanoscale ion mass spectrometry to visualize isotopic signatures inside roots and fungi. This high-resolution imaging will allow him to measure the exact nutrient exchange between plants and their microbial teams.Kristy’s journey was fueled by the Department of Energy, or DOE, ecosystem. After an undergraduate internship at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, he joined the Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center at MSU.”DOE programs have been pivotal to my career development and growth as a scientist,” Kristy said. “The cutting-edge tools at LLNL will significantly increase the scope and impact of my dissertation.”

Kristy is one of three Michigan State University graduate students were selected for the Department of Energy’s Office of Science Graduate Student Research program. The award provides world-class training and access to state-of-the-art facilities at DOE national laboratories, preparing the next generation of scientists for roles of critical importance to the nation’s energy, science and national innovation priorities.

The Science Graduate Student Research, or SCGSR, program is highly competitive, selecting only 69 students from across 27 states in its most recent solicitation cycle. For MSU graduate students Ethan Fletcher, Bill Good and Brandon Kristy, the program supports their thesis research in collaboration with host scientists at U.S. National Laboratories.

Full story can be found here on the MSU NatSci website!