<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<faculty>
   <name/>
   <firstname>Johny Arteaga</firstname>
   <lastname>Guarumo</lastname>
   <suffix/>
   <pronouns/>
   <department>Environment &amp; Society</department>
   <position>Postdoctoral Scholar</position>
   <background/>
   <location>&lt;span data-olk-copy-source="MessageBody"&gt;USU Moab Campus&lt;/span&gt;</location>
   <campusMapURL/>
   <phone>970-690-8785</phone>
   <email>johny.arteagaguarumo@usu.edu</email>
   <hours/>
   <image/>
   <personalURL/>
   <cvURL/>
   <emphasis/>
   <expertise/>
   <bio>&lt;span data-olk-copy-source="MessageBody"&gt;I am a physicist who has spent the past several years studying the processes involved in carbon fluxes between vegetation and the atmosphere, particularly in grassland ecosystems. Since August 2026, I have been a postdoctoral researcher in Brooke Osborne&amp;rsquo;s lab in the beautiful Moab campus, where we are exploring how vegetation processes shape soil carbon stocks in drylands.&lt;/span&gt;</bio>
   <priority/>
   <anumber/>
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</faculty>
