Alison K. Brody

120a Marsh Life Science Building
University of Vermont
Burlington, VT 05405 - 802-656-0449
Alison.Brody@uvm.edu
Ph.D. (1991) Univ. of California, Davis. Visiting Assistant
Professor: Albertson College of Idaho (92-93). Postdoctoral Fellow: Stanford
University (93-94). Assistant Professor: University of Vermont (95-2000). Associate Professor: University of Vermont (01-present).
Office Hours: Mon and Wed 2:30 - 3:30 & Tue 10:00 - 11:30
For information on courses go to: Course Information
Visit: Current Graduate Students
My Research
A fundamental goal of ecologists is to understand how interactions among species govern their abundance and design. Most studies examine the interactions between two species to determine, e.g., how a particular trait evolved or how one species affects another's ecology or evolution. Although examining two species interactions is tractable and provides us with a great deal of information, I believe that one must study a multitude of interactions to fully understand the patterns we observe in nature and to understand the forces that govern species abundance, distribution, population- and community-dynamics.
I am interested in the ecological and evolutionary consequences of multiple species interactions. Specifically, my work focuses on the interactions among plants, pollinators, pre-dispersal seed predators, herbivores and nectar robbers. In addition, most recently I have begun examining the role of termites as community organizers in semi-arid grasslands of east Africa.
My current work focuses on three major questions: (1) How do direct and indirect interactions among multiple species affect the ecology and evolution of host plants traits and affect population and community dynamics? (2) How accurate is fitness measured at one stage, e.g., pollination and resulting seed production, in predicting fitness over longer time scales and in determining plant population dynamics? (3) How do the effects of a single species, e.g., a mound-building termite, nectar robbing bumblebee, or an herbivore, cascade throughout a plant community?
Selected Recent Publications
Hill, L.M., Brody, A.K., and C.L. Tedesco. 2008. Mating strategies & pollen limitation in globally threatened perennial Polemonium vanbruntiae. Acta Oecologica. Full text (PDF)
Price, M.V., D.R. Campbell, N. M. Waser and A.K. Brody. 2008. Bridging the generation gap in plants: pollination, parental fecundity, and offspring demongraphy. Ecology, 89: 1596-1604. Full text (PDF)
A.K. Brody, R.E. Irwin, M.L. McCutcheon, E.C. Parsons. 2008. Interactions between nectar robbers and seed predators mediated by a shared host plant, Ipomopsis aggregata. Oecologia, 155:75-84. Full text (PDF)
Palmer, T.M. and A.K. Brody. 2007. Mutualism as reciprocal exploitation: ant guards defend foliar but not reproductive structures of an African ant-plant. Ecology 88: 3004-3011. Full text (PDF)
Brody, A.K., M.V. Price and N.M. Waser. 2007. Life-History Consequences of Vegetative Damage in Scarlet Gilia, a Monocarpic Plant. Oikos 116: 975-985. Full text (PDF)
Price, M.V., N. M. Waser, R.E. Irwin, D.R. Campbell and A.K. Brody. 2005. Temporal and Spatial Variation in Pollination of a Montane Herb: a Seven Year Study. Ecology 86: 2106-2116. Full text (PDF)
Irwin, R.E., L. Adler and A.K. Brody. 2004. The dual role of floral traits: pollinator attraction and plant defense. Ecology 85:1503-1511. Full text (PDF)
Cariveau, D., R.E. Irwin, A.K. Brody, L.S. Garcia-Mayeya, and A. von der Ohe. 2004. Direct and indirect effects of pollinators and seed predators to selection on plant and floral traits. Oikos 104: 15-26. Full text (PDF)
Freeman, R.S., A.K. Brody and C.D. Neefus. 2003. Flowering phenology and compensation for herbivory in lpomopsis aggregata. Oecologia 136: 394-401. Full text (PDF)
Campbell, D.R., M. Crawford, A.K. Brody and T.A. Forbis. 2002. Resistance to pre-dispersal seed predators in a natural hybrid zone. Oecologia 131:436443. Full text (PDF)
Irwin, R.E., A.K. Brody and N.M. Waser. 2001 The impact of floral larceny on individuals, populations and communities. Oecologia 129:161-168. Full text (PDF)
Brody, A.K. and S. Morita. 2000. A positive association between oviposition and fruit set: female choice or manipulation? Oecologia 124:418-425. Full text (PDF)
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