Elina L. Niño

  • Professor of Cooperative Extension - Apiculture
Dr. Niño's research interests include: Honey Bee Biology, Health, and Breeding, Behavior, Reproductive Physiology, Genomics, Chemical Ecology, Sociology of Beekeeping.
117 Harry H. Laidlaw Jr. Honey Bee Research Facility

Christian Nansen

  • Professor
Dr. Nansen's research interests include: Insect Ecology, IPM, Remote Sensing, host plant stress detection, host selection by arthropods, pesticide performance, and use of reflectance-based imaging in a wide range of research applications.
37 Briggs Hall

Sharon P. Lawler

  • Professor Emeritus
Dr. Lawler's research interests include: Aquatic ecology especially mosquitoes, other aquatic insects and amphibians; experimental studies of food webs and population dynamics, ecosystem subsidy.
394A Briggs Hall

Lynn S. Kimsey

  • Distinguished Professor Emerita of Entomology
Dr. Kimsey's research interests include: Biology and evolution of insects; systematics and phylogeny of Tiphiidae, Chrysididae, Sphecidae, Pompilidae and Apidae; functional morphology; mating behavior of wasps and bees; biogeography of insects.
1124 Academic Surge Building

Brian Johnson

  • Associate Professor
I am broadly interested in Animal Behavior, Evolution, Theoretical Biology, and Genomics. To date, my research has used a combination of experiments, simulation models, and computational biology to explore the evolution of advanced sociality, mechanisms of social organization, and self-organization. Chief amongst my results are that novel genes (orphans) are important for eusocial evolution and task allocation can work via a self organizing coupled localization diffusion process. I have also shown that colony fitness is often maximized when selection couples self-organization with other mechanisms, such as templates and recipes. In addition, I have written forward thinking conceptual syntheses on the evolution of the superorganism phenotype and division of labor. These syntheses present integrative biology perspectives on eusocial evolution and propose novel hypotheses, which I plan to make the subject of my future work.
383 Briggs Hall

Ian Grettenberger

  • Associate Professor of Cooperative Extension
My work focuses on pests of field and vegetable crops in California and the dynamic interactions that occur as we seek to manage them. This work includes research on plant-pest interactions, IPM, pesticide applications, insect ecology, biological control and invasive species.
73 Briggs Hall

Anthony 'Anton' Cornel

  • Entomologist
Dr. Cornel's research interests include: Genomic studies on mosquitoes of medical importance. Particular emphasis on insecticide resistance genes and Anopheles polytene chromosome physical mapping.
Kearney Agricultural Research and Extension Center

Jason Bond

  • Professor and Schlinger Endowed Chair
Dr. Bond's research interests include: Systematics, taxonomy, and evolution of terrestrial arthropods with an emphasis on arachnids and myriapods. We employ molecular, morphological, and ecological approaches to study questions related to evolutionary diversification at multiple hierarchical levels (populations – higher taxa).
Academic Surge Building 1282