John Joseph-Peter Sabuco  

President &
Chief Science Officer


Since 1979, John Sabuco has been at the forefront of commercial real estate environmental transnational analysis, ecological, agricultural and mathematical fields having published 5 college text books, 64 peer-reviewed journal articles, and having created 19 statistical/mathematical methods and procedures. His book, The Best of The Hardiest, originally published in 1984, when he was just 27 years old, and now in its third edition, was given a glowing review by noted journalist, Joan Lee Faust, of the New York Times.  Selected as an International Scientist of the Year in 2006 and listed as one of The 2000 Most Influential Scientists of the 20th Century by University of Cambridge Biographical Institute, John was recently profiled in the book Living Legends by the University of Cambridge Press for his mathematical models describing ecological community assembly and invasion rules for species at all trophic levels. In addition, he created the most highly-considered model for forest transition to date helping to predict the new constitution of disturbed forests. Lately, he created a new allometric index of tree mass that should change how we view tree size.  And latest, he has recently finalized a system for analyzing plant community diversity and succession advancement simultaneously.

John has helped to create many of the regulations used in environmental consulting and he has set legal precedent with analysis and work-product used in federal court. He has brought common sense to due diligence regulations, and brought modern mathematics to the aid of farmers and growers worldwide – in 31 countries.  John speaks 3 languages fluently and is linguistically competent in 5 others.

University of Pisa

University of Cambridge

Western Illinois University



John Joseph-Peter Sabuco  

President &
Chief Science Officer


Since 1979, John Sabuco has been at the forefront of commercial real estate environmental transnational analysis, ecological, agricultural and mathematical fields having published 5 college text books, 64 peer-reviewed journal articles, and having created 19 statistical/mathematical methods and procedures. His book, The Best of The Hardiest, originally published in 1984, when he was just 27 years old, and now in its third edition, was given a glowing review by noted journalist, Joan Lee Faust, of the New York Times.  Selected as an International Scientist of the Year in 2006 and listed as one of The 2000 Most Influential Scientists of the 20th Century by University of Cambridge Biographical Institute, John was recently profiled in the book Living Legends by the University of Cambridge Press for his mathematical models describing ecological community assembly and invasion rules for species at all trophic levels. In addition, he created the most highly-considered model for forest transition to date helping to predict the new constitution of disturbed forests. Lately, he created a new allometric index of tree mass that should change how we view tree size.  And latest, he has recently finalized a system for analyzing plant community diversity and succession advancement simultaneously.

John has helped to create many of the regulations used in environmental consulting and he has set legal precedent with analysis and work-product used in federal court. He has brought common sense to due diligence regulations, and brought modern mathematics to the aid of farmers and growers worldwide – in 31 countries.  John speaks 3 languages fluently and is linguistically competent in 5 others.

University of Pisa

University of Cambridge

Western Illinois University