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Contact Information:

Phone: (612) 625-5700
Fax: (612) 624-6777
Email: wiggins@umn.edu

University of Minnesota
Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior
100 Ecology Building
1987 Upper Buford Circle
St. Paul, MN 55108

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Home > Faculty > Ruth G. Shaw

Ruth G. Shaw

Professor, Dept. of Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior

Ph.D., Duke University, 1983

Contact Information

Phone: 612-624-7206
Fax: 612-624-6777
E-mail: shawx016@umn.edu


Graduate Faculty Memberships

Applied Plant Sciences; Conservation Biology; Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior; Plant Biological Sciences


Research Interests

Evolutionary quantitative genetics; plant population biology.


Statement


It has been known for about 40 years that natural populations harbor considerable genetic variability. However, understanding of the processes that generate and maintain genetic variation has been limited. Moreover, the evolutionary consequences of this variation has been understood mainly in general terms. To address these fundamental issues in evolutionary genetics, I employ quantitative genetic approaches in studies of natural and experimentally generated plant populations. Currently, my focus is on the evolutionary consequences of severe and abrupt framentation of prairie plant populations of Echinacea angustifolia. In the course of this research, I have participated in development of a new statistical approach for analysis of life history data to obtain estimates of fitness, fitness surfaces and population growth rates (http://www.stat.umn.edu/geyer/aster/). Beyond this, graduate students I have recently advised have assessed the potential of native plants to adapt to ongoing climate change, the evolutionary consequences of gene flow from a crop to its wild relatives, and evolutionary change in introduced species. In support of these and related projects, I have worked on statistical problems in quantitative genetics. This has led to development of Quercus (http://www.cbs.umn.edu/eeb/events/quercus.shtml), a collection of computer programs for analysis of quantitative genetic experiments. I actively participate in the University's Center for Community Genetics, a group of graduate students, postdocs and faculty with mutual interests in the interplay of ecology and genetics in the evolution of interacting species.


Selected Publications


Kavanaugh, C.M. and R.G. Shaw. 2005. The contribution of spontaneous mutation to variation in environmental response in Arabidopsis thaliana: responses to light. Evolution 59:266-275.

Davis, M.B., R.G. Shaw, and J.R. Etterson. 2005. Evolutionary responses to changing climate. Ecology 86: 1704-1714.

Shaw, R.G. and Chang, S.-M. 2006. Gene action of new mutations in Arabidopsis thaliana. Genetics 172: 1855-1865.

Geyer, C. J., S. Wagenius, and R. G. Shaw. 2007. Aster models for life history analysis. Biometrika 94: 415-426.

Lau J.A., Shaw R.G., Reich P.B., P. Tiffin. 2007. Strong ecological but weak evolutionary effects of elevated CO2 on a recombinant inbred population of Arabidopsis thaliana. New Phytologist 175: 351-362.

Lopez, S., F. Rousset, F.H. Shaw, R.G. Shaw and O. Ronce. 2008. Migration load in plants: role of pollen and seed dispersal in heterogeneous landscapes. J. Evol. Biol. 21: 294-309.

Shaw, R.G., C.J. Geyer, S. Wagenius, H.H. Hangelbroek, J.R. Etterson. 2008. Unifying life history analyses for inference of fitness and population growth. American Naturalist 172: E35-E47.

Ronce, O., F. H. Shaw, F. Rousset, R. G. Shaw. 2009. Is inbreeding depression lower in maladapted populations? A quantitative genetics model. Evolution 63: 1807-1819.



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