- Author: Kathy Keatley Garvey
UC Davis urban landscape entomologist Emily Meineke has been selected an Early Career Fellow of the Ecological Society of America (ESA).
Meineke, an assistant professor who joined the UC Davis Department of Entomology and Nematology faculty in 2020 (and during the COVID-19 pandemic, too) is one of 10 faculty members to receive the honor from the ESA Governing Board. She will be recognized at ESA's Aug. 6-11 meeting in Portland, Ore.
"This is one of the most prestigious awards an ecologist can receive," said nominator Rachel Vannette, community ecologist and associate professor, UC Davis Department of Entomology and Nematology.
“Early Career Fellows are members within eight years of completing their doctoral training (or other terminal degree) who have advanced ecological knowledge and applications and show promise of continuing to make outstanding contributions to a wide range of fields served by ESA,” an ESA spokesperson announced. “They are elected for five years.”
Meineke received her bachelor of science degree in environmental science, with a minor in biology, in 2008 from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. She obtained her doctorate in entomology in 2016 from North Carolina State University (NCU), studying with major professors Steven Frank and Robert Dunn. She wrote her dissertation on "Understanding the Consequences of Urban Warming for Street Trees and Their Insect Pests."
AtNCU, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) awarded her with the Science to Achieve Results (STAR) fellowship. As anEPA STAR Fellow,Meineke pioneered research characterizing the effects of urban heat islands on insect herbivores. And, as a National Science Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow at the Harvard University Herbaria,Meineke studied how urbanization and climate change have affected global plant–insect relationships over the past 100-plus years. She helped spearhead Harvard Museum of Natural History's Thoreau project.
At UC Davis, the Meineke laboratory "leverages natural history collections, citywide experiments, and observations to characterize effects of recent anthropogenic change on plant–insect herbivore interactions," said Vannette. Meineke has received funding from the National Science Foundation's Faculty Early Career Development (NSF-CAREER) Program; USDA's Agriculture and Food Research Initiative (AFRI); and the UC Davis Hellman Fellows Program. She was named one of 12 recipients of the Hellman award in 2022. Her project, “Assessing Preservation of Chemical Compounds in Pressed Plants," focuses on whether herbarium specimens collected over hundreds of years harbor chemical compounds that reveal mechanisms responsible for changing insect-plant interactions.
Among Meineke's scores of other activities: coordinating her department's seminars for the 2022-23 academic year, and being involved as a researcher in the Seed Pile Project, a community science initiative by Miridae Living Labs and UC Davis faculty. In the Seed Pile Project, citizen scientists spread seeds along well-traveled areas, including bus stops, alleys and sidewalks, "to better understand the dynamics of native plant seed dispersal in human-dominated landscapes," as Miridae co-founder and director Billy Kimmel, a UC Davis doctoral alumnus, explains.
Only one other UC faculty member was named an ESA Early Career Fellow this year: Holly Moeller of UC Santa Barbara, a theoretical ecologist who uses mathematical and empirical approaches to understand acquired metabolism, joins the elite group.
ESA, founded in 1915 aims to promote ecological science by improving communication among ecologists; raise the public's level of awareness of the importance of ecological science; increase the resources available for the conduct of ecological science; and ensure the appropriate use of ecological science in environmental decision making by enhancing communication between the ecological community and policy-makers.
- Author: Kathy Keatley Garvey
We just received word that noted ecologist Richard “Rick” Karban, professor in the UC Davis Department of Entomology and Nematology, has been named a fellow of the Ecological Society of America (ESA) for “his innovative contributions to community and evolutionary ecology, especially through providing conceptual advances and rigorous experimental work on plant-insect interactions."
Karban, an international authority on plant communication, is the "go-to" person when folks want a news story about plant communication or when scientists want to research plant sensing and communication.
“Rick's pioneering discoveries on plant communication through volatile compounds certainly merit this recognition,” said Steve Nadler, professor and chair of the UC Davis Department of Entomology and Nematology.
Karban authored the 240-page book, Plant Sensing and Communication (University of Chicago Press), considered a landmark in its field.
ESA, in announcing its list of 27 fellows today (Feb. 6), said that its fellowship program recognizes the many ways in which its members contribute to ecological research and discovery, communication, education and pedagogy, and management and policy.
“Plants responded more effectively to volatile cues from close relatives than from distant relatives in all four experiments and communication reduced levels of leaf damage experienced over the three growing seasons,” they wrote.
The gist of it: if you're a sagebrush and a predator (such as a grasshopper) is eating your nearby kin, another sagebrush, it's good to be closely related. Through volatile (chemical) cues, your kin will inform you of the danger so you can adjust your defenses. Yes, plants can communicate
Karban was featured in a December 2013 edition of The New Yorker in Michael Pollan's piece, “The Intelligent Plant: Scientists Debate a New Way of Understanding Plants."
Karban and his graduate student, Eric Lopresti, also drew widespread interest when they announced that their woolly bear caterpillars can predict whether a Republican or Democrat will be elected to the White House. When the population of woolly bear caterpillars (Ranchman's Tiger Moth, Platyprepia virginalis) at their research site at the Bodega Marine Reserve thrives, a Democrat heads to the White House, they said. When the population dives (as it did this year), a Republican occupies the oval office. (See Bug Squad blog).
And why not? “Paul the Octopus had a pretty good run predicting soccer matches in 2012, so perhaps the woolly bears have earned as much credibility at forecasting this presidential election,” Karban related. Who says scientists don't have fun?
Highly honored by his peers, Karban is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) and recipient of the 1990 George Mercer Award from ESA for outstanding research. He was named an outstanding professor, ecology, at UC Davis in 1986. He has published three books and more than 100 journal articles.
Karban received his bachelor's degree in environmental studies from Haverford (Penn.) College in 1977 and his doctorate in biology from the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, in 1982. He joined the UC Davis faculty in May 1982 as an assistant professor, advancing to associate professor in 1988 and to full professor in 1994.
Overall, it was a great day today for UC Davis ecologists. Also selected fellows were:
- Anurag Agrawal, professor in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University, who received his doctorate at entomology at UC Davis in 1999, studying with Rick Karban. Agrawal was singled out his “innovative contributions to community and evolutionary ecology, especially through providing conceptual advances and rigorous experimental work on plant-insect interactions.”
- John Stachowicz, professor of evolution and ecology, of the UC Davis Department of Evolution and Ecology “for his fundamental contributions to the fields of symbiosis andmutualism,multi-trophic species interactions,biogeography, and invasion biology.”
ESA established its fellows program in 2012 with the goal of honoring its members and supporting their competitiveness and advancement to leadership positions in the Society, at their institutions, and in broader society, said spokesperson Lisa Lester.
The 10,000-member Ecological Society of America, founded in 1915, is the world's largest community of professional ecologists. They're committed to advancing the understanding of life on Earth, and some 4000 attend the Annual Meeting, featuring the most recent advances in ecological science. The Society publishes five journals and a membership bulletin and broadly shares ecological information through policy, media outreach, and education initiatives.
Related Links:
Rick Karban: Kin Recognition Affects Plant Communication and Defense
Past ESA Fellows
TED-Ed Original Lessons: "Can Plants Talk to Each Other?"