Michele Dudash

Portrait of Michele Dudash

Michele Dudash

Biology Professor Emerita

Research Interests

My research interests are motivated by my curiosity of what factors contribute to population's persistence or demise over time. The research in my lab encompasses the evolution and maintenance of mating and breeding systems, plant-pollinator interactions, the dynamic interplay between  invasive and native species, the context in which a plant-animal interaction can be mutualistic vs. parasitic,  the importance of long distance gene flow and investigating how connectivity between overwintering grounds and breeding grounds influences individual reproductive success for migratory song bird species. In this framework, the basic research conducted in my lab has direct implications for conservation and restoration strategies of threatened and endangered species. I am interested in sponsoring graduate students in all aspects of evolutionary ecology. The questions addressed in my research program often require field experiments, complimented by greenhouse and laboratory studies.


Education

Ph.D., University of Illinois at Chicago, 1987. Plant population biology; inbreeding depression; mating system evolution.
Postdoctoral Fellow, University of Toronto, 1987-1989
Full Professor, Department of Botany, Norwegian University of Science and Technology


All Publications

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Latest Papers

Food limitation modulates the endogenous control of spring migratory behavior in a captive long-distance migratory bird population

| Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
Author(s): Calandra Q. Stanley, Sara H. Hallager, Michele R. Dudash, et. al
UMD Author(s): Michele Dudash


Pollination‐precision hypothesis: support from native honey bees and nectar bats

| New Phytologist
Author(s): Alyssa B. Stewart, Carolina Diller, Michele R. Dudash, et. al
UMD Author(s): Michele Dudash


Seasonal variation in habitat selection for a Neotropical migratory songbird using high‐resolution GPS tracking

| Ecosphere
Author(s): Calandra Q. Stanley, Michele R. Dudash, Thomas B. Ryder, et. al
UMD Author(s): Michele Dudash


Foraging strategies of generalist and specialist Old World nectar bats in response to temporally variable floral resources

| Biotropica
Author(s): Alyssa B. Stewart, Michele R. Dudash
UMD Author(s): Michele Dudash


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