Department News and Updates
Buried in their Work!
EEB volunteers get dirty digging roots to help with invasive species research.
EEB Departmental Awards 2017
Congratulations to all the graduate students, undergraduate students, and staff who received awards at the EEB Awards Ceremony May 1, 2017.
Division of Biology Awards 2017
EEB congratulates our graduate students who won awards from UT’s Division of Biology
2017 Chancellor’s Honors Awards for EEB
Two members of EEB received awards at the Chancellor’s Honors Award Banquet April 19, 2017.
Graduate Student Senate Awards 2017
Congratulations to the EEB grad students who won Graduate Student Senate awards this year.
Beyond Academia 2017
EEB graduate students collaborated to host the Beyond Academia: Environmental Edition forum April 8, 2017.
EEB a Large Presence at STEM Symposium
The 3rd Annual Women in STEM Research Symposium took place Tuesday, March 21, 2017.
Summer Undergraduate Research Internships for EEB
Four undergraduate students affiliated with EEB received 2017 Summer Undergraduate Research Internships.
Darwin Day 2017
Darwin Day 2017 marked the 20th year of Darwin Day celebrations at UT! We hope you make plans to join us next year!
“We are extremely grateful for the support of Dean Lee and the college, which helped provide the needed resources to transform our greenhouses at Hesler and Senter Halls into Research I facilities,” says Susan Kalisz, EEB department head.
“Our greenhouse complex now provides the winning combination of the plant growth expertise in our knowledgeable staff; excellent, controlled research facilities; and terrific teaching resources in a living collection,” Kalisz says.
Rats. Fish. Mud. Though not readily apparent, water is the thread that ties all three together.
Alannie-Grace Grant is modeling the climatic differences between closely related self-fertilizing and cross-fertilizing angiosperm plants. Her results show that self-fertilizing species live in a wider range of climatic zones and in warmer, drier regions than cross-fertilizing species. She hypothesizes that the reduced size of self-fertilizing species and potential for faster development rates may strongly affect photosynthetic water use efficiency (an indicator of physiological stress) or the species’ ability to reproduce before dry late-season conditions. Using the genus Collinsia as a model system, the NSF DDIG award will provide funds to perform experiments on self-fertilizing and cross-fertilizing plants in different climatic conditions.
Increasing demand for food, energy, and raw materials is driving rapid environmental change with profound impacts on biodiversity around the world. Xingli Giam, a new assistant professor in EEB, focuses on characterizing and mitigating anthropogenic impacts on the environment with a particular emphasis on tropical and freshwater ecosystems.
Sam Borstein is studying how dietary specialization may affect evolutionary patterns using ray-finned fishes as a study system. Ray-finned fishes are extremely diverse in their feeding habits and prey on a wide variety of resources, including filtering plankton from the water, foraging for algae, and actively hunting other fish. How effectively the fish feed is closely connected to their physical anatomy, especially how well the fish can maneuver and capture prey. Some physical traits are thought to lead to increased speciation or decreased extinction rates (known as key innovations), but may limit possible flexibility in diet evolution.
When Thomas Brooks (’98) graduated from the University of Cambridge with a degree in geography, he wanted to focus his PhD work on tropical conservation. There was one problem – no one in the United Kingdom was interested in taking him on as a student.
Chandler Brown, an undergraduate working in the Williams Lab, entered his first plants-focused class already intrigued by the evolution of these beautiful organisms. He came to college for this class. With the acquaintance of Professor Joe Williams, his foot was in the door.