Steven A. Juliano 
Distinguished Professor of Ecology 

Last update November 2008                                

RESEARCH INTERESTS                                                                          
My research concerns behavioral, population, and community ecology of insects, and the ways in which these different levels of organization within ecology are linked. Currently I am involved with two major projects, one on ecology of container dwelling mosquitoes. This project involves post doctoral researchers, and graduate and undergraduate students, and is funded by a National Institutes of Health grant, in which I collaborate with colleagues at Florida Medical Entomology Laboratory, University of Florida.  The other project is an NSF-funded Cross-disciplinary Research at Undergraduate Institutions (CRUI) project on life history phenotypes of insects, using grasshoppers as a model organism. A summary of past research in my lab on our CRUI project is here.

This project involves undergraduates exclusively, and is funded by a National Science Foundation grant for Collaborative Research at Undergraduate Institutions. There are numerous conceptual connections between my ongoing research on ecology and evolution of container-dwelling mosquitoes and my more recent research on environmental effects on reproduction by grasshoppers. Both projects involve testing hypotheses about how the external environment influences life history events (i.e., transitions from one developmental stage to another).

In addition to these research projects, I have a long standing interest in biostatistics, which has led to my involvement in research on application of statistical techniques to a variety of biological problems. I also have broad interests in insect community ecology, particularly in the roles of competition and predation in organizing communities.

Selected  publications               Selected courses

BEES Brown Bag Seminar      
(listed semester S 2009)

               

 

 

 

 

I am also a charter member
of the National Center for
Science Education's
Project Steve.
 
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