Eric Lind
Advisor: Pedro
Barbosa
Education:
B.S. Biology Georgetown University
Research Interests:
I use theoretical and empirical tools of community ecology
to examine the structure of an assemblage of forest macrolepidopteran
larvae (moth caterpillars) sharing a single host plant. I
am attempting to examine life history differences between
abundant and scarce species at a local scale, using a phylogenetically
controlled approach. I am also examining the macroecological
patterns produced in a long-term survey dataset, comparing
different theoretical models and their predictions against
this intensively sampled assemblage abundance information.
I am also interested in the spatial variance of the assemblage
depending on landscape features such as isolation, and in
the effect of plants other than the host on the composition
of the focal assemblage. I am otherwise generally fond of
caterpillar behavior and ecology.
Location of Research:
Patuxent National Wildlife Refuge, Laurel, MD
Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, Edgewater, MD
Other parks in central and southern MD
Publications:
Weiss, M. R., E. M. Lind, M. T. Jones, J. D. Long, and J.
L. Maupin. 2003. Uniformity of leaf shelter construction by
early-instar larvae of Epargyreus clarus (Hesperiidae),
the Silver-spotted Skipper. Journal of Insect Behavior
16(4): 465-480.
Lind, E.M., M.T. Jones, J.D. Long, and M.R. Weiss. 2001. Ontogenetic
changes in leaf shelter construction by larvae of Epargyreus
clarus (Hesperiidae), the Silver-spotted Skipper. Journal
of the Lepidopterists’ Society, 54:77-82.
Awards:
Graduate Fellow, University of Maryland College of Life Science,
2003-2005. |