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Undergraduate Student Research Spotlight: Alexandria Mabry

Posted on: September 27th, 2021 by erabadie

Biology major Alex Mabry in the lab.

Meet Alex Mabry, an undergraduate student pursuing a BA in biology with minors in chemistry and psychology. She is a biology mentor for freshmen, a teaching assistant for nonmajor freshman biology labs, and conducts research in Professor Colin Jackson’s lab to determine how invasive species can dominate aquatic ecosystems.

Why the Asian Clam, Corbicula—one of the most important aquatic invaders to take over aquatic environments and drive out native freshwater mussels—is so successful is unclear, and research in Dr. Jackson’s lab is looking to see if the gut microbiome of Corbicula plays a role in its success as an invader. Working with postdoctoral researcher Dr. Marlène Chiarèllo, Alex is investigating how the microbiome of Corbicula relates to the morphology of its shell to determine if age or growth characteristics are a factor in its gut microbial community.

Alex also has other research interests and spent the summer at Texas Tech University, as a research intern examining interactions between HIV and COVID-19 infections.
 

How did your interest in biology develop?

I became interested in studying biology in middle school after I got to go to a science camp. That was the first time I was exposed to microbiology, and I’ve been passionate about it ever since.
My first year on campus I was still very interested in microbiology when I approached Dr. Jackson to ask about any ideas he had for research… Fast forward three years later and I’m still working in his lab!
 

Talk about your college experience as a biology major and work participating in research.

I’ll say firstly, being a biology major is definitely not easy, but it is always interesting. Biology has completely changed the way I look at things around me. That said, even while I was learning so many new concepts in my classes, it wasn’t until I started doing research through Dr. Jackson‘s lab that I truly was able to understand biology in a hands-on way. Being able to work in a lab and actually perform procedures and experiments that we read about in class is humbling.
 

Discuss your career goals.

After graduation, I hope to attend medical school. I am currently applying to medical school and I hope to possibly pursue a dual MD/PhD program.

While I’m still not sure on what specialty I want to pursue, I know I want to work in a rural or underserved area. I hope to be an advocate for my future patients and go beyond the walls of the clinic to truly make a difference in my community. My small hometown has done nothing but support me, and I hope to be able to support a similar community in the future.

Helping Crops Combat Climate Change

Posted on: June 25th, 2021 by erabadie

UM researcher explores effects of climate change on plant growth

A University of Mississippi biology professor’s research that examines challenges facing crop productivity caused by global climate change is attracting attention.

Yongjian Qiu, an assistant professor of biology, is studying a plant gene that could help solve a problem caused by warming global temperatures in which a plant stem grows too fast, damaging the plant’s biomass and leading to severe crop reductions.

Qiu’s work in this field is the subject of a new Nature Communications paper, Qiu’s first scientific journal paper as a main author while at UM. Graduate student Abhishesh Bajracharya, who is pursuing a Ph.D. in biological science at UM, serves as a co-author on the paper, which was released April 6.

“As a young UM faculty member, this paper means a lot to me,” said Qiu, who joined the faculty in 2019. “I’m excited and more confident with my career at UM. It proves that I’m competent in accomplishing a research project with good quality and makes me more confident when carrying out the other exciting research projects in my laboratory.”

Increases in global temperatures due to climate change are expected to drastically reduce crop productivity, so understanding the mechanism of temperature signaling in plants has become important for devising strategies to sustain crop production in a changing climate.

The Qiu Laboratory at the university is searching for an understanding of the mechanism by which external and internal signals, including temperature fluctuations, co-regulate plant growth and development to improve the functional traits of economic crops.

“When the department interviewed Dr. Qiu, it was his research aimed at exploring biological solutions to coming agricultural challenges associated with climate change that really grabbed our attention,” said Brice Noonan, acting department chair and associate professor of biology. “To see him so quickly bring to publication a study that reveals a novel gene influencing plant growth – and crop yield – is quite exciting.

“Dr. Qiu’s research program has continued to churn along through the pandemic, and I’m eager to see what the future holds for his research program.”

Understanding Stem Growth

Part of the lab’s research is examining the plant gene PIF4, which is a key link in promoting stem extension in various plant species, including economically important crops. The excessive lengthening of stems in certain plants also can cause the stem to bend, leading to nutrient loss, which also affects crop productivity.

“Understanding at the molecular level how this gene is produced and maintained in plant cells is central to finding the solution to solving the problem with stem growth and yield loss,” Qiu said.

“The study we just published found a novel protein called RCB that helps to stabilize the PIF4 protein when plants are facing temperature elevations. Therefore, we are one step further in understanding how global warming affects plant growth through the central regulator PIF4.”

Qiu’s examination of this issue began when he was an assistant project scientist at the University of California at Riverside, working in plant biology professor Meng Chen’s laboratory. Qiu’s postdoctoral research focused on how light and temperature signals regulate plant growth and development, and in 2019 he published his first paper on plant structural changes under warm temperatures – called thermomorphogenesis – in Nature Communications.

“The universal thermomorphogenetic mechanism shared by many plant species, once identified, would help us and other scientists design climate-smart crops that may sustain their biomass and grain yield when facing temperature fluctuations,” Qiu said.

His research helped him discover a novel function of a protein called HEMERA involved in thermomorphogenesis that regulates the stability and activity of the PIF4 protein.

“The absence of HEMERA’s function in a plant would lead to a growth defect in the short stem at warmer temperatures,” Qiu said. “Since then, I realized the importance of PIF4 and got interested in unveiling the entire pathway underlying the regulation of PIF4 level and activity when plants face temperature fluctuations.”

Qiu and Bajracharya’s Nature Communications paper continues an exploration of how the RCB protein and the novel function of the HEMERA protein involved in thermomorphogenesis interact with PIF4. They are still searching for how that interaction is achieved to regulate the stability and activity of PIF4.

The full title of the paper is “RCB initiates Arabidopsis thermomorphogenesis by stabilizing the thermoregulator PIF4 in the daytime.” Joining Qiu and Bajracharya as authors are members of the Institute for Integrative Genome Biology at the University of California at Riverside.

“I’m thankful to my postdoctoral adviser and his team for their contributions and efforts in pushing this publication,” Qiu said. “But at the same time, I also truly appreciate the support from the Department of Biology, College of Liberal Arts and UM.

“The work would not be accomplished without the initial start-up funding, the renovation of my new laboratory and the assistance from the previous and current chairs, staff and colleagues in my home department.”

Forging a Plant Path

Qiu received his bachelor’s degree from the University of Science and Technology of China, a leading Chinese research university. Working on his undergraduate thesis in his junior year, he joined a plant molecular biology lab that focused on plant resistance against a variety of stresses, such as drought, salt and oxidative stresses.

“That was my first contact with plant physiology and molecular biology, and immediately I fell in love with it,” Qiu said.

“I learned that as immobile organisms, plants need to develop complex systems to cope with the ever-changing environment, and I realized that understanding how plants sense and respond to each environmental stimulus is the key to solving some critical agricultural issues we humans are facing in the 21st century.”

After receiving his doctorate in plant science at Washington State University, Qiu worked as a postdoctoral associate at Duke University and at the University of California at Riverside before joining the Ole Miss faculty.

Qiu said he was drawn to the Department of Biology because of its open and collaborative work environment for new faculty members. He also chose UM because of the diversity of research backgrounds among its biology faculty, covering fields such as cellular and molecular biology, evolution, ecology and more.

“This is the biology department I prefer because I believe the interactions between scientists with different backgrounds will foster innovative research that has the potential to solve the most important scientific questions,” he said. “I feel very comfortable talking with my peers and discussing research topics with them.”

Since joining UM, Qiu has involved more than a dozen Ole Miss students in his research endeavors. This semester, two graduate students and eight undergraduates are working as research assistants in his lab.

When working with students, Qiu remembers his beginnings in plant biology and the mentorship of those who assisted him along his journey as he helps train the next generation of scientists. He also is guided by his belief that science and technology are the essential driving forces for human survival and progress.

“Although some of them may not stay in academia, I hope that their research experiences in my laboratory would help them look at the world in a little different way,” Qiu said. “We scientists should communicate and collaborate to solve hard questions and improve our understanding of nature as well as help our civilization last as long as possible.”

 

Biologist Publishes Breakthrough Study

Posted on: June 25th, 2021 by erabadie

Lainy Day’s research advances the study of avian evolution

Lainy Day, an associate professor of biology at the University of Mississippi and director of the university’s neuroscience minor, has published an article in Nature, an international journal that publishes the finest peer-reviewed research in all fields of science and technology.

Part of an international team, Day has helped unlock essential new information about the evolution of birds, known as avian evolution. The breakthrough research brings critical new data that will ultimately help with species preservation.

This research initiative is part of the BK10 project, which seeks to collect genomes, sets of genetic instructions, from all existing bird species on Earth. The project’s initiative has resulted in the world’s largest database of bird genomes.

The research reported in Nature includes 363 bird species, 267 sequenced for the first time. This amounts to representative species for 92% of all avian families.

“By examining multiple lineages and noting genes that diverge among specific lineages, we may discover, for example, the genes contributing to loss of flight in ostriches, or those that allow a songbird to trill beautiful notes in contrast to the deafening call of the rooster,” Day said. “We want to know how particular genes allow for trait evolution.”

The research published in Nature has been featured on a BBC podcast; on the website of Cosmos, a quarterly news magazine; and in an article distributed by the United Press International news service.

Day, who joined the Ole Miss faculty in 2006, become involved in this research via the Manakin Genomics Research Collaborative Network, initiated by herself and five other core researchers and supported by a $500,000 grant they secured from the National Science Foundation. Members of the BK10 project and the Manakin Network then recruited other scientists worldwide to sequence avian genomes from DNA samples collected in the wild or in aviaries.

Day’s research focuses on 13 of the 50 species of the manakin family of birds, which live in tropical areas across the Americas. For this initiative, she contributed DNA samples from one of the two species of manakins represented in the Nature manuscript.

The genome was sequenced from tissue samples of the golden-collared manakin that Day collected in Panama when she was doing research in collaboration with the University of California at Los Angeles.

Preserved in a freezer at -80 degrees Celsius, samples such as these are critical to her research. Day’s focal research seeks to understand the genetic language that shapes complex behavior and drives brain evolution.

Manakins are ideal for these studies, as males use complex acrobatic mating displays punctuated by loud wing sounds to attract mates. In separate research, Day has shown that female fancy for complexity in displays has driven increased brain size in manakins.

“As we begin to sequence genomes for each of the species I work with, we come to understand the formula for creating athletic prowess,” she said. The BK10 project aims to share these manakin genomes and those of all birds with the world.

“The database the BK10 project has created is far larger than any others,” she said. “Scientists have been looking at fewer genomes in depth. With this manuscript and continuing work of the Manakin Research Collaborative Network and the BK10 project, we provide, for the first time, sufficient genomic data to unlock the mysteries of bird evolution as well as fundamental principles of evolution.”

Brice Noonan, associate professor and acting chair of the Department of Biology, called Day’s work critical to “understanding the evolution of complex avian behavior. Its link to neurological development has long been recognized,” he said.

“This most recent publication of Dr. Day and her collaborators makes significant strides toward a better understanding of the genetic underpinnings of evolutionary change that is sure to set the stage for not only her research, but that of evolutionary biologists the world over.”

To read the report in Nature, click here.

Understanding Vaccines Topic for Virtual Oxford Science Cafe

Posted on: June 25th, 2021 by erabadie
UM Health Center staff show off their bandages after getting the first doses of their COVID vaccines. The history and variety of vaccines is the topic for the Jan. 19 edition of the university's Science Cafe, which will be available on Zoom. Photo by Kevin Bain/Ole Miss Digital Imaging Services

UM Health Center staff show off their bandages after getting the first doses of their COVID vaccines. The history and variety of vaccines is the topic for the Jan. 19 edition of the university’s Science Cafe, which will be available on Zoom. Photo by Kevin Bain/Ole Miss Digital Imaging Services

UM biologist to discuss types, safety and side effects during Jan. 19 event on Zoom

The history and variety of vaccines – including the recent development of vaccines for COVID-19 – is the topic for a virtual Oxford Science Cafe scheduled for Jan. 19 by University of Mississippi faculty researchers.

The virtual Oxford Science Cafe program will be hosted on Zoom beginning at 6 p.m. Wayne Gray, instructional assistant professor of biology, will discuss “Understanding Vaccines: Preventing Diseases from Smallpox to COVID-19.”

“Vaccines are a miracle of modern medicine,” Gray said. “These days, everyone is talking about vaccines and hoping for an end to the COVID-19 pandemic.”

Questions to be addressed during the 45-minute webcast include: How do they work to prevent disease? How safe are vaccines, and why do some people have concerns about vaccines? What is herd immunity? What are the various types of vaccines?

“We’ll review the history of vaccines and discuss several of the more than 20 vaccines that are now routinely given to children and adults,” Gray said. “Finally, we’ll examine the current COVID-19 vaccines and consider their effectiveness and safety.

“Issues regarding COVID-19 vaccine distribution will be discussed.”

To view the Science Cafe, go to https://olemiss.zoom.us/j/97568315885.

Biologists Developing Mobile App for Coastal Marine Assessment

Posted on: November 23rd, 2020 by erabadie

Glenn Parsons and Richard Buchholz lead new Gulf of Mexico Citizen Scientist Initiative

Citizen scientists can take an active role in studying and protecting biodiversity in the Gulf of Mexico using the Mobile App for Marine Assessment being developed by UM biologists. The project is funded by federal money through the RESTORE Council and the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality. Submitted photo

Citizen scientists can take an active role in studying and protecting biodiversity in the Gulf of Mexico using the Mobile App for Marine Assessment being developed by University of Mississippi biologists. The project is funded by federal money through the RESTORE Council and the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality. Submitted photo

NOVEMBER 23, 2020 BY EDWIN B. SMITH

In the age of crowdfunding and viral media, two University of Mississippi biologists are developing a mobile phone app that will allow “citizen scientists” to conduct marine assessments on the north central Gulf of Mexico.

Professors Glenn Parsons and Richard Buchholz have partnered to create a Mobile App for Marine Assessment as part of the Gulf of Mexico Citizen Scientist Initiative. MAMA’s state-of-the-art technology will allow residents and visitors to upload photos, measurements, GPS location and other data regarding specimens they have captured, observed and identified.

UM biologist Glenn Parsons shows off a tuna caught in the Gulf of Mexico. Parsons is a co-principal investigator on the Mobile App for Marine Assessment project. Submitted photo

UM biologist Glenn Parsons shows off a tuna caught in the Gulf of Mexico. Parsons is a co-principal investigator on the Mobile App for Marine Assessment project. Submitted photo

Users also will be able to submit photos of endangered or unusual specimens of fish and other marine creatures for identification, track the abundance and health of fish species seasonally and regionally, document invasive species in Gulf waters, and monitor changes in the health of coastal ecosystems and shoreline erosional changes.

The initiative has been awarded $1.7 million, including $1.2 million to UM and $500,000 to the Mississippi Department of Marine Resources.

“In the aftermath of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, I was surprised to learn how difficult it was to quantify the loss of the all the various types of marine and coastal life forms in the Gulf of Mexico,” Buchholz said. “Dr. Parsons and I are both interested in the conservation of biodiversity and felt strongly that the mammoth task of monitoring the populations of living things could only be accomplished with the help of citizen scientists.”

The educators believe the best way to get people to care about conserving biodiversity in the Gulf of Mexico is for them to be actively involved in monitoring and managing it. The Gulf of Mexico Citizen Scientist Initiative will help achieve that goal while also educating the public about biodiversity, population and ecosystem ecology, and the need for them to be involved in restoration efforts.

“Citizen science programs have the potential to educate the average person about how science advances,” Parsons said. “Additionally, at a time when research funding is scarce, citizen science initiatives are capable of providing valuable data to researchers that would otherwise be cost-prohibitive, if not impossible, to obtain.”

The program promises to make science more accessible to the general public, Buchholz said.

UM biologist Richard Buchholz collects data on a research field trip. Buchholz is a co-principal investigator on the Mobile App for Marine Assessment project. Submitted photo

UM biologist Richard Buchholz collects data on a research field trip. Buchholz is a co-principal investigator on the Mobile App for Marine Assessment project. Submitted photo

“These initiatives have broadened opportunities for public participation in science and have served to ‘demystify’ the scientific process for the average citizen,” he explained. “Thanks to the internet and smartphones, data can be acquired, uploaded, evaluated and accessed with amazing rapidity.”

Before being funded, Buchholz and Parsons had already organized Ole Miss faculty across several schools and departments to create a Biodiversity and Conservation Research Group. Parsons is the group’s director and Buchholz is associate director.

Josh Gladden, vice chancellor of research and sponsored programs; Lee Cohen, dean of the College of Liberal Arts; and Gregg Roman, chair and professor of biology, all have been supportive of the efforts.

Roman said his colleagues’ achievements bode well for the department’s reputation for rigorous research.

“Funding of the MAMA program demonstrates that faculty in the biology department at the University of Mississippi are thinking outside the box to lead efforts in biodiversity and conservation research,” Roman said. “Dr. Parsons and Dr. Buchholz came up with the innovative solution of finding ways for all Mississippians to help collect this information and provide everyone with a clearer picture of the health of our marine ecosystems.

“MAMA empowers all of us to contribute to an understanding of what is happening, and all of us can be part of the solution.”

Scientists at coastal organizations, including the Gulf Coast Research Laboratory and the National Marine Fisheries Service, are providing advice during the developmental phase of the program.

The Mobile App for Marine Assessment being developed by Ole Miss biologists will allow citizen scientists to easily track the abundance and health of coastal species, as well as enter photos and enter photos and other data on the health of coastal ecosystems. Graphic courtesy Glenn Parsons/UM Department of Biology

The Mobile App for Marine Assessment being developed by University of Mississippi biologists will allow citizen scientists to easily track the abundance and health of coastal species, as well as enter photos and enter photos and other data on the health of coastal ecosystems. Graphic courtesy Glenn Parsons/UM Department of Biology

“The first step is to design a prototype app that includes all the desired features,” Parsons said. “Through face-to-face meetings between our team and those interested parties, we will make decisions on all features to be included in the app.”

“Design is crucial in that it is important to establish how the app will appear, its graphics and so forth, and in how the user experiences the app,” Buchholz said. “Once developed, we will integrate analytics into the app to help track downloads, user engagement and retention of the app.”

Participants will be able to download MAMA to their mobile phones without charge.

The development team will provide a field kit, which includes a tape measure, thermometer, refractometer, scale, meter stick, tags and other items, to select users. Training sessions, conducted by Gulf of Mexico Citizen Scientist Initiative personnel and coordinated with sport fishing clubs, commercial fishing organizations, schools and various community organizations, will be provided for participants.

“The sessions will provide information on how the app works, how to take data, how to input data and pictures, the disposition of data, the procedures for using the field kit, how to apply tags and so forth,” Buchholz said.

All data uploaded will be reviewed and verified by initiative personnel before entry into the database. Information entered into MAMA with the alert function will be immediately reviewed.

Glenn Parsons checks out a blacktip shark during a research trip in the Gulf of Mexico. Submitted photo

Glenn Parsons checks out a blacktip shark during a research trip in the Gulf of Mexico. Submitted photo

“The alert function will simultaneously transmit to GMCSI personnel cellphones such that the appropriate response can be provided,” Parsons said. “Summary data will be provided via a dedicated website. Complete data sets will likewise be provided.”

Mississippi Department of Marine Resources officials praised the MAMA project as “a terrific way to supplement harvest data with multiple species.”

“Our DMR switchboard deals with these calls between 8 and 5 on weekdays only,” said Paul F. Mickle, MDMR chief scientific officer. “This could be expanded to receive posts and location data 24 hours a day.”

For more information about the UM Department of Biology, visit https://biology.olemiss.edu/. For information on the Center for Biodiversity and Conservation Research, go to https://cbcr.olemiss.edu/.

Disclaimer: This project was paid for (in part) with federal funding from the RESTORE Council and the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality under the Resources and Ecosystems Sustainability, Tourist Opportunities, and Revived Economies of the Gulf Coast States Act of 2012 (RESTORE Act). The data, statements, findings, conclusions and recommendations are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect any determinations, views or policies of the RESTORE Council or the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality.

Biology Professor Selected as Ambassador for Nationwide Program

Posted on: October 16th, 2019 by erabadie

Tamar Goulet will mentor teen girls to encourage interest in STEM fields

Tamar Goulet, UM professor of biology, has been selected as one of 125 female ambassadors for a new program, launched by the American Association for the Advancement of Science in conjunction with Dallas-based Lydia Hill philanthropies, to encourage girls to pursue STEM education and careers.

Tamar Goulet, UM professor of biology, has been selected as one of 125 female ambassadors for a new program, launched by the American Association for the Advancement of Science in conjunction with Dallas-based Lydia Hill philanthropies, to encourage girls to pursue STEM education and careers. Photo by Robert Jordan

SEPTEMBER 23, 2019 BY ABIGAIL MEISEL

Tamar L. Goulet, University of Mississippi professor of biology, has been selected as one of 125 female ambassadors for a new nationwide education program.

The program, launched by the American Association for the Advancement of Science in conjunction with Dallas-based Lydia Hill philanthropies, is designed to provide role models and support in math and science to middle-school girls to encourage their interest in STEM education and careers.

The academic IF/THEN Ambassadors were chosen based on their research, commitment to teaching and professional accomplishments. As an IF/THEN program ambassador, Goulet will connect with female students ages 11-13 in person and through various media platforms, including YouTube channels, and provide individual coaching via Skype.

“A scientist should not only excel in science but also facilitate understanding of, and foster enthusiasm for, science,” Goulet said. “My career combines novel innovative research in science and teaching with science communication and mentorship.”

Goulet, who joined the UM faculty in 2001, has published numerous papers on the symbioses between cnidarians – including corals, octocorals and sea anemones – and their mutualistic algae. Her work has received funding from the National Science Foundation, NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

She teaches graduate and undergraduate courses in biology.

In 2008, she received the College of Liberal Arts’ Cora Lee Graham Award for Outstanding Teaching of Freshmen. In 2018, she received an honorable mention Teaching Excellence Award from the Personalized Learning and Adaptive Teaching Opportunities Program.

“Professor Goulet is an accomplished researcher who has also devoted her career to teaching and mentoring students,” said Lee M. Cohen, dean of the College of Liberal Arts. “The University of Mississippi has been the lucky beneficiary of both these talents.

“I know her passion for teaching will help ignite enthusiasm for STEM in the country’s next generation of female budding scientists.”

Survival of the Weakest

Posted on: September 20th, 2019 by erabadie

Professor Brice Noonan Puts a New Spin on Evolutionary Biology

JP Lawrence photo of poison frog.

Dyeing Poison Frog (Dendrobates tinctorius) from the Kaw Mountains, French Guiana. Photo by J.P. Lawrence

SEPTEMBER 19, 2019 BY ABIGAIL MEISEL

When he was a teenager in south Florida, Brice Noonan discovered a new love that ultimately shaped the course of his life.

“I became enamored of frogs in high school,” said Noonan, an associate professor in the Department of Biology.

His fascination increased when he learned about a specific species of South American frogs: poison dart frogs, so called because several indigenous peoples have used them to tip blowgun darts. The frog secretes a life-threatening bitter poison as its natural defense.

Noonan discovered a store near his childhood home that imported reptiles and amphibians, including poison dart frogs, so he had a ready supply to study.

Decades later, his homespun investigations evolved into the scientific article, “Weak Warning Signals Can Persist in the Absence of Gene Flow,” published earlier this month in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). The study was featured last Thursday in the New York Times.

“There are several variations of this species of poison dart frog, and they have different colorations,” said Noonan. “Most are blue and black with bright yellow markings, but some populations of the same species have white stripes instead of yellow ones. That type of variation within a species is incredibly rare. It was a conundrum as to why the species was so variable.”

The answer was unexpected. The yellow-marked frogs have a stronger poison than their white-striped counterparts. Their predators, chiefly birds, spot the brilliant yellow from afar and know to stay away. Yellow reads as “danger.”

The white-striped frogs have a less potent toxin, which would seemingly make them more vulnerable to the same predators—but they’re not.

“These frogs live close to the bold and ostentatious yellow frogs, but not among them—about five miles away,” said Noonan. “But they are harder to detect and far less recognizable to birds. Birds are more afraid of something they’ve never seen than something that they’ve tried that has toxins. So, they stay away.”

Noonan’s research, funded by the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (France), was a collaboration with a nine-member international team that was led by one of his former students, J.P. Lawrence. Now a postdoctoral researcher at the University of California at Irvine, Lawrence served as the lead author on the PNAS article.

Noonan is dedicated to mentoring not only graduate students but also undergraduates. He teaches a section of UM’s introductory biology class as well as upper-level courses. During the upcoming winter session, he will teach a course in the Caribbean for UM students.

“I’ve loved reptiles and amphibians since I was a little kid,” he said. “Then, when I was at a community college in south Florida, I discovered scientific journal articles, which changed my life.”

Now, he’s writing them.

VIDEO: Science Friday Is ‘Hot’ For Turkey Research

Posted on: November 20th, 2014 by erabadie No Comments

turkeyThe popular national show Science Friday  highlights the research of Richard Buchholz, associate professor of biology, for clues as to what a female turkey finds “hot” in a male.

With its fanned plumage and bold strut, a male wild turkey’s display conjures images of Americana and festive feasts. But this bird’s grandstanding isn’t intended for human eyes—it’s for female turkeys who actually use it to discern a male’s genetic prowess. How exactly she parses performances to pick a suitor can be a fairly complex enterprise.

Watch the Science Friday VIDEO>>