Difference between revisions of "Tobias Landberg"

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Storrs, CT 06269 <br>
 
Storrs, CT 06269 <br>
  
'''About:''' Tobias is currently a PhD candidate in the Ecology & Evolutionary Biology department at the University of Connecticut, Storrs. He is co-advised by Drs. Kurt Schwenk and Carl Schlichting. His thesis committee is rounded out by Drs. Elizabeth Jockusch and Dr. Kentwood Wells. <br>
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'''About:''' Tobias is currently a PhD candidate in the Ecology & Evolutionary Biology department at the University of Connecticut, Storrs. He is co-advised by Drs. Kurt Schwenk and Carl Schlichting. His thesis committee is rounded out by Drs. Elizabeth Jockusch and Kentwood Wells. <br>
 
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'''Research:''' "Evolutionary-developmental-functional-eco-morphology" was the joke term I coined with my good friend Manny Azizi to cover our interests. In a nutshell, it's about unraveling the mobius strip of how organisms perform their behaviors, how sources of variation affect that performance, and how that performance affects evolution. The three main sources of variation in nature are ontogenetic (or developmental), ecological (or environmental) and phylogenetic (or evolutionary). My research approach is experimental.
  
  
  
 
[[Category:EEB Graduate Students|Landberg]]  [[Category:EEB People|Landberg]]
 
[[Category:EEB Graduate Students|Landberg]]  [[Category:EEB People|Landberg]]

Revision as of 22:00, 22 June 2008

Doctoral Student

Office: BioPharmacy 410
Voice: (860) 486-4158
E-mail: tobias.landberg@uconn.edu

Mailing address:
75 N. Eagleville Road, U-3043
Storrs, CT 06269

About: Tobias is currently a PhD candidate in the Ecology & Evolutionary Biology department at the University of Connecticut, Storrs. He is co-advised by Drs. Kurt Schwenk and Carl Schlichting. His thesis committee is rounded out by Drs. Elizabeth Jockusch and Kentwood Wells.

Research: "Evolutionary-developmental-functional-eco-morphology" was the joke term I coined with my good friend Manny Azizi to cover our interests. In a nutshell, it's about unraveling the mobius strip of how organisms perform their behaviors, how sources of variation affect that performance, and how that performance affects evolution. The three main sources of variation in nature are ontogenetic (or developmental), ecological (or environmental) and phylogenetic (or evolutionary). My research approach is experimental.