![]() |
||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
We work with: evolution fishes plants phylogeny insects DNA biogeography human evolution fossils speciation animal behavior population biology gene flow endangered species tropics diseases Africa New Jersey protein flower development fungi plankton models stratigraphy paleoanthropology morphology taxonomy primates Hox genes invertebrates oceans rainforests fruitflies Trichoptera cichlids Ascomycetes gentians angiosperms sequencing Homo deep-sea mass extinction paleoecology social behavior birds mammals fleshy fruits South America taxonomy Linnaeus new taxa symbiosis pollination vicariance dispersal DNA alignment species concept parasites ungulates morphometrics PCA parsimony Bayesian Maximum likelihood bootstrap phenology breeding barriers language PCR holotype hominids entomology anthropology geology sedimentology biodiversity language cultures skeleton phenotype genotype microbes dinosaurs origin of life sea-level paleontology Ice Age Earth climate life history phylogeography divergence virus vertebrates conservation selection adaptation Darwin species genus migration history domestication hiatus patterns process lemurs North America identification key ferns aroids polygenic traits oaks variation genes genetics mutations cladistics co-evolution predation time scale life death change oxygen |
Evolutionary
Biology at |
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
This is the home page for research and courses in broadly defined evolutionary biology at Rutgers University. Courses, graduate students, and faculty are spread out over many departments, programs, and campuses. Below you can find some quick links to get an overview of what is going on in evolutionary biology at Rutgers. Subscribe to the Evolution at Rutgers e-mail list here for announcements and updated information: https://email.rutgers.edu/mailman/listinfo/evolution_ru Information about events at Rutgers during the Darwin 200-year celebration can be found here. Former
news items and links to announcements and materials: Why is evolution important in teaching, science and society? Teaching Resources Click on the pictures to follow links to pages with more detailed information for each subject.
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||
![]() |
|
struwe@aesop.rutgers.edu | ||||||||||||||||||