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Arianne J. Cease

Ph.D. student, School of Life Sciences
Arizona State University


B.S., Zoology, 2004
Oregon State University

 

   
email__
acease@asu.edu
phone__
(480) 727 - 6073
mail__
School of Life Sciences
PO Box 874601
Tempe, AZ 85287-4601



My interests are at the interface of physiology and ecology; I am intrigued by how organisms adapt to shifts in their environment. Currently, I am investigating dispersal in grasshoppers. In response to environmental variations, many species of insects develop an increase in the frequency of migratory forms adapted for dispersal. Of these, the most dramatic and best studied are the migratory grasshoppers (locusts), which have historically caused major devastations globally.

Part of my dissertation research is based in China, on the grasslands of Inner Mongolia and part in southern Arizona. I am examining relationships among plant stoichiometry and grasshopper population density, performance, and dispersal.

I am co-advised by Drs. Jim Elser and Jon Harrison.

Cease, A.J., Lutterschmidt, D.I. and Mason, R.T. (2007). Corticosterone and the transition from courtship behavior to dispersal in male red-sided garter snakes (Thamnophis sirtalis parietalis). General and Comparative Endocrinology. 150 (1), 24-131.

 

© 2007 Jon F. Harrison, School of Life Sciences. All rights reserved.
School of Life Sciences Arizona State University