Difference between revisions of "Juan Carlos Villarreal"

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The first aspect of my research is unraveling the phylogenetic origin of '''''M. aenigmaticus''''' and its closest Neotropical relative using a multi-locus approach.  
 
The first aspect of my research is unraveling the phylogenetic origin of '''''M. aenigmaticus''''' and its closest Neotropical relative using a multi-locus approach.  
 
I am also testing for any cryptic sexual recombination using microsatellites and  exploring the genetic consequences of the lack of sex in the population dynamics of the SA populations. In addition I will be comparing patterns of genotypic diversity between SA populations and putative conspecific and sexually reproducing populations  from tropical alpine regions.  Given the potential extinction threat due to the Muller's ratchet effect (accumulation of deleterious mutations), this  study will have conservation and evolutionary implications '''(more details soon).'''
 
I am also testing for any cryptic sexual recombination using microsatellites and  exploring the genetic consequences of the lack of sex in the population dynamics of the SA populations. In addition I will be comparing patterns of genotypic diversity between SA populations and putative conspecific and sexually reproducing populations  from tropical alpine regions.  Given the potential extinction threat due to the Muller's ratchet effect (accumulation of deleterious mutations), this  study will have conservation and evolutionary implications '''(more details soon).'''
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[[Image:Maenigmaticus.jpg|thumb|rigth|Megaceros (Nothoceros) aenigmaticus, collected in North Carolina. Note the elongated eggs inside of the thallus, probably from a damselfly (K. Tennessen, pers. com.). More study neede to verify the identity of the insect]]
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'''CURRENT INTERESTS'''
 
'''CURRENT INTERESTS'''
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Other interests are the evolution of carbon concentration mechanisms in the hornwort chloroplast, especially the ultrastructural and physiological implications of the presence of an algal-like pyrenoid. Symbiotic interactions between hornworts/cyanobacteria and cyanobiont specificity. Relationship between inmature insect stages and hornworts.
 
Other interests are the evolution of carbon concentration mechanisms in the hornwort chloroplast, especially the ultrastructural and physiological implications of the presence of an algal-like pyrenoid. Symbiotic interactions between hornworts/cyanobacteria and cyanobiont specificity. Relationship between inmature insect stages and hornworts.
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[[Image:mucubaji.jpg|thumb|left|Páramo near Cerro Chirripó, Costa Rica. Photo courtesy of Dr. N. Wickett]]
 
[[Image:mucubaji.jpg|thumb|left|Páramo near Cerro Chirripó, Costa Rica. Photo courtesy of Dr. N. Wickett]]
[[Image:zempoala.jpg|thumb|rigth|Lagunas de Zempoala, Morelos, Mexico. A Pleistocene sleeping volcano]]
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'''EDUCATION'''
 
'''EDUCATION'''
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Renzaglia, K.S., '''J.C. Villarreal''' & R.J. Duff. '''In press''' (available from November 2008). New insights into morphology, anatomy and systematics of hornworts. In Bryophyte Biology II, B. Goffinet & J. Shaw (eds). '''(Book chapter)''' (http://www.cambridge.org/uk/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=9780521693226)
 
Renzaglia, K.S., '''J.C. Villarreal''' & R.J. Duff. '''In press''' (available from November 2008). New insights into morphology, anatomy and systematics of hornworts. In Bryophyte Biology II, B. Goffinet & J. Shaw (eds). '''(Book chapter)''' (http://www.cambridge.org/uk/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=9780521693226)
[[Image:coverpage.jpg|thumb|left|Cover of the book Bryophyte Biology II]]
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[[Image:zempoala.jpg|thumb|left|Lagunas de Zempoala, Morelos, Mexico. A Pleistocene sleeping volcano]]
 
'''Villarreal, J.C.''', G. Hässel de Menéndez & N. Salazar Allen.''' 2007''' ''Nothoceros superbus'' (Dendrocerotaceae), a new species of hornwort from the Neotropics. The Bryologist 110: 279-285.
 
'''Villarreal, J.C.''', G. Hässel de Menéndez & N. Salazar Allen.''' 2007''' ''Nothoceros superbus'' (Dendrocerotaceae), a new species of hornwort from the Neotropics. The Bryologist 110: 279-285.
 
http://www.early-land-plants-today.org/taxon-pages
 
http://www.early-land-plants-today.org/taxon-pages

Revision as of 12:38, 24 April 2009

Doctoral Student
JC lab.jpg

Office: BioPharm 312
Voice: (860) 486-6306
Fax: (860) 486-6364
E-mail: juan.villarreal@uconn.edu, jcarlos.villarreal@gmail.com
Mailing address:
75 N. Eagleville Road, U-3043
Storrs, CT 06269


Near Volcán Turrialba, Costa Rica
Volcán Popocatepetl, Mexico, Dic. 2008, semi active vocano

DISSERTATION RESEARCH

I am interested in the diversification and biogeographical distribution patterns of hornworts especially the Nothoceros alliance (including the Megaceros from the American Continent). My dissertation research is focusing on the major evolutionary events leading to the lack of sexual reproduction in the Southern Appalachian (SA) endemic and asexual hornwort Megaceros aenigmaticus . The species is the only member of the genus in North America and there are no reported observations of sporophyte production. In the SA region male and female plants live ~ 30 miles apart and male plants produce depauperate antheridia (for unknown reasons sperm cells are unable to develop functional flagella). The first aspect of my research is unraveling the phylogenetic origin of M. aenigmaticus and its closest Neotropical relative using a multi-locus approach. I am also testing for any cryptic sexual recombination using microsatellites and exploring the genetic consequences of the lack of sex in the population dynamics of the SA populations. In addition I will be comparing patterns of genotypic diversity between SA populations and putative conspecific and sexually reproducing populations from tropical alpine regions. Given the potential extinction threat due to the Muller's ratchet effect (accumulation of deleterious mutations), this study will have conservation and evolutionary implications (more details soon).

Megaceros (Nothoceros) aenigmaticus, collected in North Carolina. Note the elongated eggs inside of the thallus, probably from a damselfly (K. Tennessen, pers. com.). More study neede to verify the identity of the insect


CURRENT INTERESTS

Systematics, anatomy, ultrastructure, molecular evolution and biogeography of hornworts (Anthocerotophyta), especially Neotropical taxa. Population genetics and genetic implications of the loss of sex in bryophytes.

Other interests are the evolution of carbon concentration mechanisms in the hornwort chloroplast, especially the ultrastructural and physiological implications of the presence of an algal-like pyrenoid. Symbiotic interactions between hornworts/cyanobacteria and cyanobiont specificity. Relationship between inmature insect stages and hornworts.


Páramo near Cerro Chirripó, Costa Rica. Photo courtesy of Dr. N. Wickett



EDUCATION

University of Connecticut, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, USA. Spring 2006- Doctorate degree

Southern Illinois University, Department of Plant Biology, Carbondale, USA. Fall 2003- Dec. 2005

Master’s degree: Ultrastructure and evolution of hornworts with emphasis on symbiotic interactions with cyanobacteria and character evolution.

Universidad de Costa Rica & Organization for Tropical Studies (OTS), Costa Rica. Jan.-Feb. 2003 Graduate course in Tropical Ecology and Conservation

University of Panamá, Bachelor’s degree in Plant Biology with Major in Bryology. 1995-2003.

Humboldt Field Research Institute & University of Maine, USA. June 2001 Field undergraduate course on biosystematics of temperate bryophytes

Autofluorescence of spore tetrads and pseudoelaters of Leiosporoceros dussii


PUBLICATIONS (peer-reviewed and book chapters)

Renzaglia, K.S., J.C. Villarreal & R.J. Duff. In press (available from November 2008). New insights into morphology, anatomy and systematics of hornworts. In Bryophyte Biology II, B. Goffinet & J. Shaw (eds). (Book chapter) (http://www.cambridge.org/uk/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=9780521693226)

Lagunas de Zempoala, Morelos, Mexico. A Pleistocene sleeping volcano

Villarreal, J.C., G. Hässel de Menéndez & N. Salazar Allen. 2007 Nothoceros superbus (Dendrocerotaceae), a new species of hornwort from the Neotropics. The Bryologist 110: 279-285. http://www.early-land-plants-today.org/taxon-pages

Duff, R.J., J.C. Villarreal, D.C. Cargill & K.S. Renzaglia. 2007. Progress and challenges toward developing a phylogeny and classification of the hornworts. The Bryologist, 110: 214-243.

Villarreal, J.C. & K.S. Renzaglia. 2006. Structure and development of Nostoc strands in Leiosporoceros dussii (Anthocerotophyta): a novel symbiosis in land plants. American Journal of Botany 93(5): 693-705. (Link to Cover http://www.botany.org/plantimages/ImageData.asp?IDN=abot93-5)

Villarreal, J.C. & K.S. Renzaglia. 2006. Sporophyte structure in the neotropical hornwort Phaeomegaceros fimbriatus: implications for phylogeny, taxonomy and character evolution. International Journal of Plant Sciences 167: 413-427.

Dauphin, G.; T. Pócs; J. C. Villarreal & N. Salazar Allen. 2006. Nuevos Registros de Hepáticas y Anthocerotófitas para Panamá. Tropical Bryology 27: 73-85.

Cargill, D.C.; R.J. Duff, J.C. Villarreal & K.S. Renzaglia. 2005. Generic concepts in hornworts: historical review, contemporary insights and future directions. Australian Systematic Botany 18: 7-16.

Duff, R.J.; D.C. Cargill, J.C. Villarreal & K.S. Renzaglia. 2004. Phylogenetic relationships of the hornworts based on rbcL sequence data: novel relationships and new insights. Monographs in Systematic Botany from the Missouri Botanical Garden 98: 41-58. (Book chapter)


PUBLICATIONS (Non peer-reviewed)

Villarreal, JC. 2009. Evolutionary implications of the lack of sexual reproduction in the Southern Appalachian endemic hornwort Megaceros aenigmaticus. Chinquapin 17 (1): 1. (A bulletin of the Southern Appalachian Botanical Society)


AWARDS (for a full CV, go to http://hydrodictyon.eeb.uconn.edu/people/goffinet/People.html)

Sullivant Award from the American Bryological and Lichenological Society for the best paper published in the Bryologist during the year 2007 for the paper " Progress and challenges toward developing a phylogeny and classification of the hornworts" . The Bryologist, 110: 214-243 by Duff, R.J., J.C. Villarreal, D.C. Cargill & K.S. Renzaglia.

Looking for hornworts in the Smoky Mountains, Southern Appalachians. Photo courtesy of Dr. K. McFarland

FIELD EXPERIENCE

Panama, Costa Rica, Venezuela (Merida), Dominican Republic, Southern Appalachians, Mexico, Colombia (Pasto, Nariño)

AD-HOC REVIEWER

Journal of Experimental Botany; The Bryologist; Cryptogamie, Bryologie-Lichénologie, Fieldiana, Cambridge University Press

2008 Inaugural Member of Editorial Board for Acta Biologica Panamensis


Cerca de la Divina Pastora, Pasto, Nariño, Colombia, 2009. Photo courtesy of Prof. Laura Campos


INVITED TALKS

Congreso Colombiano de Botánica, Nariño, Colombia (2009); Department of Botany, The Field Museum (2008); Department of Biology, University of New Mexico (2007); Congreso Latinoamericano de Botánica, Dominican Republic (2006); Department of Biology, University of Panamá (2006); World Congress of Bryology, Venezuela (2004).




LINKS

http://www.early-land-plants-today.org

http://hydrodictyon.eeb.uconn.edu/people/goffinet/Classificationhornworts.html

http://briologia.blogspot.com/

http://cobiopa.org/Panamensis.html