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Congrats to Biology’s Andrius Dagilis and Daniel Matute for their Perspective in Science!

May 26, 2020

Congratulations to UNC Biology’s Andrius Dagilis and Daniel Matute for their Perspective featured in Science magazine!

The article highlights a new paper by Dagilis and Matute which touches on important sights into the evolution of species barriers and hybrid incompatibility. Congrats!

Andrius Dagilis is a post-doc in the UNC Department of Biology and Daniel Matute is an assistant professor with a focus on genetic and ecological basis of reproductive isolation.

Check out the article here.

Biology Department gets an Instagram!

May 19, 2020

Follow the UNC Biology Department’s new Instagram: @uncbiology. Here, we will post all things UNC and biology, so make sure to follow to keep updated!

Congratulations to Top 10 Scholar-Athlete Jamie Antinori and her Faculty Honoree, Dr. Gidi Shemer!

May 19, 2020

Congratulations to Jamie Antinori on being chosen as a Top 10 Scholar-Athlete for 2019-2020! These ten students, five male and five female, are the graduating student-athletes with the highest cumulative grade point averages.

As noted on the Academic Support Program for Student Athletes (ASPSA) website, Jamie is a member of the gymnastics team and is from Park City, Utah. She is majoring in Biology with minors in Chemistry and Neuroscience. Jamie has been inducted into Phi Beta Kappa and has been on the Dean’s List each of her semesters at UNC. She has been conducting research on air pollution and lung health at the Alexis Lab in the Center for Environmental Medicine, Asthma and Lung Biology. After graduating this month, she will continue her work full time at the Alexis Lab while she is applying to medical school. In five years, she will be about to start her residency.

Jamie selected Biology’s Dr. Gidi Shemer as a faculty member that made a significant contribution to her academic and personal success! You can see more in the following video, including a special thank you from Jamie to Dr. Shemer. Congratulations to both!

SARIC Awarded to Dr. Taylor and Sebastian Nichols!

April 16, 2020

Congratulations to Dr. Brain Taylor and undergraduate Sebastion Nichols (class of 2021) for winning the Summer Award for Research-Intensive Courses (SARIC) for Undergraduate Research for Summer 2020!

The Summer Award for Research-Intensive Courses is a tuition award offered for a wide range of Maymester and Summer Session I and II courses to give students the opportunity to enroll in research-intensive courses during the summer session. The award covers in-state tuition for one three-hour research-intensive course for the student and provides a $1000 stipend for faculty teaching the mentored undergraduate research course. Read more here.

Dr. Brian Taylor‘s laboratory studies bio and bioinspired navigation and orientation. They are particularly interested in animal magnetic reception (i.e., how do animals use the earth’s magnetic field to get from point A to point B). You can follow them on Twitter: @qbeslab.

Congratulations Sebastian and Dr. Taylor!

BIOL 476/476L Featured on the Endeavors Webpage!

April 15, 2020

Congratulations to Keith Sockman and Allen Hurlbert for the article on their Avian Biology class featured on the Endeavors webpage! The article lauds the associate professors for their emphasis on fieldwork as the class visits wildlife reserves across the state throughout the semester.

Keith Sockman‘s lab studies the causes and consequences of reproductive decisions. Birds are an excellent system for this topic because their decisions are often easy to observe and apply across a broad range of taxa and habitats.

Allen Hurlerbt‘s lab asks questions about the structure of ecological communities, and the processes that are responsible for determining the patterns of diversity, composition, turnover and relative abundance both within local assemblages and across the globe.

Endeavors is the online magazine of research and creative activity at UNC-Chapel Hill. Endeavors (ISSN 1933-4338) is published by the Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Read the article here.

Double Congratulations to Elizabeth Moore

April 13, 2020

Congratulations to Biology graduate student Elizabeth Moore, who has received both a Summer Research Fellowship AND a Dissertation Completion Fellowship from the Graduate School!

Elizabeth originally hails from Hillsboro, Kentucky. She graduated in the class of 2014 from Mount Holyoke College with a BA in Biology. During her Masters at the University of Cambridge, she studied the effects of temperature on the seasonal polyphenism of African butterflies. She started her PhD at the University of North Carolina in the fall of 2015. For her PhD project, she is investigating the effects of heat stress on host-parasitoid interactions, using the model system of Manduca sexta and Cotesia congregata.

Dr. Goldstein featured on UNC’s The Well

April 2, 2020

Dr. Bob Goldstein is featured on UNC’s The Well for his leadership of workshops for North Carolina public school teachers. Congratulations Dr. Goldstein!

Dubbed the “Johnny Appleseed of science,” Dr. Goldstein shows teachers from across the state how to turn ten dollars of hardware-store materials and their smartphone into “a tool of scientific discovery” as microscopes.

UNC’s The Well: The Well is designed to be Carolina’s news source for faculty and staff. Employees can read the day’s top stories, learn more about projects in schools, units and departments, and see how Carolina’s employees work to uphold the University mission of research, teaching and service.

Read the article here: https://thewell.unc.edu/2020/03/30/johnny-appleseed-of-science/

Carolina Arts & Sciences Spring 2020 Magazine

April 2, 2020

The spring 2020 issue of Carolina Arts & Sciences, the magazine of UNC’s College of Arts & Sciences, is now available online at https://magazine.college.unc.edu/.

Cover story: Every summer, biologists David and Karin Pfennig conduct fieldwork on spadefoot toads. In addition to the graduate students they bring along to the Arizona desert, they have a pair of special assistants — their daughters. Read more here: https://magazine.college.unc.edu/news-article/the-frog-family/

Congratulations to Drs. David and Karin Pfennig for gracing the cover of the spring 2020 issue of the magazine!

Phi Beta Kappa Welcomes New Members

March 30, 2020

Congratulations to our biology majors elected this year to Phi Beta Kappa!

Ashley Nicole Arensdorf
Viren Baharani
Shama Birla
Corbin Bryan
Frankie Burgos
Abigail Glaize Carey-Ewend
Christina Cobos
Lucas Christopher Collins
Peter Jonathan Compton
Sarah Marie Cook
Henry Jacob Cox
Jesse Christina Dahringer
Kent R. Dickerson
Julia Marie DiNicola
Christina Maria Rosa D’Ovidio
Trevor David Fachko
Sarah Flexman
Andrew Charles Fregenal
Jason Guo
Andrew Jacob Harvey
Jamison Kline
Emily Michele Kokush
Farhan Lakhani
Spencer Maranto
Lauren Alexis McCormick
Nicole Rose Nay
Victoria Nguyen
Maxwell Vincent Petruzzi
William Bradley Sabo
Katherine Rae Salisbury
Suvleen Kaur Singh
Joy A. Stouffer
Katherine Gray Welch
William Frederick Wiener
Samantha Mary Yi

Kayla Goforth quoted in Nature World News!

March 23, 2020

Biology Ph.D. student Kayla Goforth has been quoted in an article for Nature World News for her work on an article with Charles P. Postelle, Jr. Distinguished Professor Kenneth Lohmann! Congratulations Kayla and Kenneth!

The referenced article was originally published in Current Biology: Current Biology a biweekly peer-reviewed scientific journal that covers all areas of biology, especially molecular biology, cell biology, genetics, neurobiology, ecology, and evolutionary biology and has been a part of Cell Press since 2001. Kayla and Kenneth’s article is titled “Odors from marine plastic debris elicit foraging behavior in sea turtles.”

Kayla is a member of Kenneth’s lab and studies the development of foraging ground fidelity in sea turtles, migration patterns of long-distance marine migrants, and geomagnetic imprinting and natal homing. Kenneth‘s research focuses on geomagnetic imprinting and natal homing in sea turtles, salmon, and other long-distance ocean migrants, use of Earth’s magnetic field in navigation by animals, the physics, neuroscience, and genes underlying magnetic field detection, neuroethology and sensory ecology, and conservation physiology, biodiversity, and Galapagos megafauna.

Read the Nature World News article HERE and the Current Biology article HERE