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Washington University in St. Louis News & Information > News Topics > Science & Technology >

Evolution

Faculty Experts:

Showing Evolution Experts 1 through 10 of 10.  - Show Home
Garland Allen

Professor of Biology in Arts & Sciences

Garland Allen
Garland Allen
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Allen is a historian of science. The major focus of his present research is on the history of genetics and its relationship to eugenics and agriculture in the United States between 1900 and 1950. In addition to an interest in Mendelian genetics, agriculturists and eugenicists also believed that the ...


Expertise: eugenics, history, history of evolution, history of genetics, history of sciene, philosophy and sociology of biology

Direct contact: (314) 935-6808 / allen@biology.wustl.edu


Jonathan Chase

Associate Professor of Biology in Arts & Sciences and director of Tyson Research Center

Chase
Chase

Jonathan M. Chase, associate professor of biology in Arts & Sciences and director of the university's Tyson Research Center, focuses his research on the rules (or lack thereof) underlying the diversity, distribution, and abundance of animal and plant species from the population/community/ecosystem ...


Expertise: biology, ecology, ecosystem, natural history, evolution, biodiversity, food webs, …

Direct contact: (314) 935-4105 / jchase@wustl.edu


Tiffany Knight

Assistant Professor of Biology

Tiffany Knight
Knight

Knight is an ecologist who studies the population ecology of rare and invasive plant species, and addresses questions related to the causes and consequences of their abundances and distributions. Why are some species rare, while their closely related congeners are widespread? How does dispersal ability ...


Expertise: Ecology, biology, plants, ecosystems, habitat

Direct contact: (314) 935-8282 / knight@wustl.edu


Jonathan Losos

Professor of Biology in Arts & Sciences

Losos
Losos
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The primary focus of the Losos Lab is on the behavioral and evolutionary ecology of lizards. Major questions concern how lizards interact with their environment and how lizard lineages have diversified evolutionarily. Addressing such questions requires integration of behavioral, ecological, functional ...


Expertise: Darwin, evolution, lizards, population biology, behavioral studies, ecological studies, functional morphological studies, …

Direct contact: (314) 935-6706 / losos@biology.wustl.edu


Ralph Quatrano

Ralph S. Quatrano, Ph.D., is the Spencer T. Olin Professor in Arts and Sciences and chair of the Department of Biology at Washington University in St. Louis. He is internationally known for his plant science work on patterns of embryo formation, and how the patterns lead cells to acquire traits or ...


Expertise: Plants, plant biology, botany, moss, genome, algae, genes, …

Direct contact: (314) 935-6850 / rsq@wustl.edu
Barbara Schaal

Spencer T. Olin Professor in Arts & Sciences

Barbara Schaal
Barbara Schaal
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Barbara A. Schaal's reserach investigates the evolutionary process within plant populations using a wide variety of techniques, from field observations to quantitative genetics and molecular biology. Schaal has studied hosts of plant species ranging from oak trees to Mead's milkweed, a midwestern ...


Expertise: endangered, native non-crop species

Media assistance: (314) 935-5272 / dlutz@wustl.edu


Richard J. Smith

Ralph E. Morrow Distinguished University Professor of Physical Anthropology

Richard Smith
Richard Smith
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Smith is interested in understanding biological variation in fossil apes and humans, particularly australopithecines and Miocene hominoids. Inferences concerning the life-history, ecology, and behavior of these species from the fragmentary morphology found in the fossil record usually involve comparisons ...


Expertise: Miocene hominids, biomechanics, primate comparative and functional morphology, quantitative methods

Direct contact: (314) 935-4843 / rjsmith@artsci.wustl.edu


Robert Sussman

Professor of Anthropology in Arts & Sciences

Sussman

Sussman, a specialist in the ecology and social structure of primates, does extensive fieldwork in primate behavior and ecology in Costa Rica, Guyana, Madagascar and Mauritius. His groundbreaking study of two species was the subject of Marlin Perkins' documentary "Lemurs of Madagascar" in 1981. His ...


Expertise: Costa Rica, Guyana, Madagascar, Mauritius, behavior and evolution, conservation, early models, …

Direct contact: (314) 935-5264 / rwsussma@artsci.wustl.edu


Alan Templeton

Professor of Biology in Arts & Sciences

Alan Templeton
Alan Templeton
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Templeton applies molecular genetic techniques and statistical population genetics to a variety of problems in evolutionary and conservation biology. He explores natural selection in various species, genetic variability, the role of lipid metabolic genes in coronary artery disease in humans, and the ...


Expertise: evolution of HIV, evolutionary and conservation biology, genetic variability, lipid metabolic genes, molecular genetics, natural selection

Direct contact: (314) 935-6868 / temple_a@biology.wustl.edu


Erik Trinkaus

Mary Tileston Hemenway Professor of Physical Anthropology

Erik Trinkaus
Trinkaus
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Erik Trinkaus is considered by many to be the world's most influential scholar of Neandertal biology and evolution. Trinkaus' research is concerned with the evolution of our genus as a background to recent human diversity. In this, he has focused on the paleoanthropology of late archaic and early modern ...


Expertise: Human paleontology, Paleolithic archaeology, functional anatomy, skeletal biology

Direct contact: (314) 935-5207 / trinkaus@artsci.wustl.edu



Showing Evolution Experts 1 through 10 of 10.  - Show Home

Related Information
Media Assistance:

Diana Lutz
Senior Science Editor
dlutz@wustl.edu

(314) 935-5272
Related Links:
Evolution, Ecology & Population Biology at WUSTL
Library Resources: Evolution
Course: Epic of Evolution

Related Groups:

Departments:
Biology
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Genetics

- View All Groups

Related Topics:
Anthropology
Chemistry
Computer Technology
Environment
Genetics
Geology / Planetary Science
Life Sciences
Materials Science
Medical Genetics
Nanotechnology
Physics
Plant Sciences / Agriculture
Science & Technology
Space / Cosmology

- View All Topics

Revised:

Wednesday, Dec. 1, 2004


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