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Off to the Amazon...

2/25/2016

 
​Much of the Rabosky Lab is about to embark on a herpetological expedition to the Peruvian Amazon. We will be working on projects that range from biodiversity discovery and description to the evolution of community structure in one of the most species-rich landscapes on Earth. The weather is expected to be hot, humid, and froggy with a chance of snakes.  Stay tuned for post-trip details!
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Welcome

2/25/2016

 
The Rabosky Lab has a new website. We'll try to keep this updated with lab happenings.
    • Macroevolution & Speciation
    • Herpetology
    • Vertebrate Natural History & Evolution
    • Evolutionary Ecology
    • Phylogenetic Comparative Methods

    ​Research in the Rabosky Lab seeks to understand the causes of evolutionary radiations. Why do some groups of organisms contain so many species, and why do many other groups contain so few? Why do some groups have such tremendous ecological and morphological diversity? How do ecological interactions influence the diversification of species and phenotypes, and how does diversification in turn affect ecological community structure?  

    We address these questions using a combination of fieldwork, molecular phylogenetics, and mathematical and computer modeling.  


    Our research ultimately seeks to understand why some groups undergo dramatic evolutionary explosions and why many other groups do not.
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