Difference between revisions of "Andrew Frank"
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==Research Interests== | ==Research Interests== | ||
I am interested in answering evolutionary questions by leveraging molecular data in novel ways. My current graduate work focuses on three core interests: speciation and population genetics, systematics and taxonomy, and deep-level phylogenetics. Broadly speaking, I am interested in questions about... | I am interested in answering evolutionary questions by leveraging molecular data in novel ways. My current graduate work focuses on three core interests: speciation and population genetics, systematics and taxonomy, and deep-level phylogenetics. Broadly speaking, I am interested in questions about... | ||
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* Causes and identification of non-bifurcating speciation in North American skinks | * Causes and identification of non-bifurcating speciation in North American skinks | ||
* Phenotypic changes in relation to processes of speciation, especially those associated with a transition to a cave-dwelling phenotype | * Phenotypic changes in relation to processes of speciation, especially those associated with a transition to a cave-dwelling phenotype | ||
* Resolving differences between morphological and molecular phylogenies | * Resolving differences between morphological and molecular phylogenies | ||
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==Teaching== | ==Teaching== |
Revision as of 17:59, 19 March 2014
Contact Information
Office: BPB 322
Phone: (845) 728-6551
Mailing Address: Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
University of Connecticut
75 N. Eagleville Road Unit 3043
Storrs, CT 06269
Education
PhD Student, University of Connecticut, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology 2013-present
Major Advisor: Elizabeth Jockusch
Research Interests
I am interested in answering evolutionary questions by leveraging molecular data in novel ways. My current graduate work focuses on three core interests: speciation and population genetics, systematics and taxonomy, and deep-level phylogenetics. Broadly speaking, I am interested in questions about...
- Causes and identification of non-bifurcating speciation in North American skinks
- Phenotypic changes in relation to processes of speciation, especially those associated with a transition to a cave-dwelling phenotype
- Resolving differences between morphological and molecular phylogenies