Ashley Hawkins
Contact: aehawkins'at'ucdavis.edu
I am a PhD student in the Plant Pathology Department. My research is on native forest pathogens of old-growth mixed-conifer forests in the Sierra Nevada. I am interested in understanding how pathogens interact and impact natural forest systems by altering species composition, stand structure, diversity, and regeneration. I am also interested in fungal biology, ecology, and systematics.
I joined the Rizzo lab in 2010, first doing fieldwork on Sudden Oak Death in Big Sur, CA, followed by a lab technician position working on stream monitoring for Phytophthora ramorum across its range in CA.
Publications/Presentations:Ashley with Fomitopsis officinalis
Hawkins AE. 2011. Forest Pathogen Dynamics in Old-Growth White fir/Douglas-fir Forests of Northwestern California. California Forest Pest Council Annual Meeting, McClellan, CA (invited presentation).
Hawkins A, Henkel TW. 2010. Native fungal pathogens influence succession in old-growth conifer forests of California, USA. IX International Mycology Congress, Edinburgh, Scotland (poster).
Hawkins A, Henkel TW. 2009. Native forest pathogens may facilitate persistence of Douglas fir in late-seral Abies concolor/Pseudotsuga menziesii forests in Northern California. Mycological Society of America (MSA) Annual Meeting, Snowmass, Utah (presentation).
Education:
Degree
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Institution
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Year
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Specialization
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B.S.
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Humboldt State University, CA
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2006
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Botany
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M.A.
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Humboldt State University, CA
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2009
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Biology
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