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Behavior & Behavioral Ecology
Research ranges from studying bee, bat, bird and and primate behavior to understanding how the ecosytem molds behavior and its evolution. Faculty include Drs. Fleming, Green, Searcy, Waddington and adjunct faculty.
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| Theodore H. Fleming, Ph.D., Michigan, 1969. The relationship between species richness of vertebrate mutualists and their food plants in tropical and subtropical communities differs among hemispheres. Oikos 111: 556-562, 2005. |
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| Steven M. Green, Ph.D., Rockefeller, 1973. Ethology and behavioral ecology, particularly animal communication and social organization, especially of primates and fish; conservation biology. NOAA Tech. Report NMFS 151, 2001. |
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| William A. Searcy, Ph.D., Washington (Seattle), 1977. Behavioral ecology, especially animal communication, avian mating systems. Am. Naturalist 159:221–30, 2002. |
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| Keith D. Waddington, Ph.D., Kansas, 1977. Behavioral ecology; pollination biology; foraging behavior and communication. J. Comp. Physiol. 187:293–301, 2001. |
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Adjunct Faculty
Judith Lee Bronstein, Ph.D., Michigan, 1986. Evolutionary ecology of mutualisms; plant-insect interactions, especially obligate relationships. (Arizona)
Doyle McKey, Ph.D., Michigan, 1979. Evolutionary ecology of ant-plant mutualisms; evolutionary approaches in ethnobiology. (CNRS, Montpellier) |
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