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Most of my work has focused on the role of defenses in protecting plants from damage by herbivores and pathogens. My early research quantified patterns of plant defenses and tried to understand how selection may have favored different defense investments in species of different life histories and habitats (e.g. 'resource availability theory'). I have also used physiological approaches to examine the costs and benefits of defense as well as the adaptations of plants to life in the understory. More recently I have been exploring how the third trophic level may regulate herbivore populations, and how plant traits may influence this interaction. A major current focus in the lab is to characterize chemical defenses and link these to other plant traits, within a phylogenetic context. I have chosen to address these questions in tropical rain forests because the high diversity allows multi-species comparisons, and because biotic interactions have played a particularly strong role in shaping tropical communities.
Projects:
Bioprospecting - Coley & Kursar
Defenses of young leaves - Coley & Kursar
Delayed greening in young leaves - Kursar & Coley
Tri-trophic interactions - Coley
Physiology and distributions of tropical plants – Kursar and Coley
Curriculum vitae
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