Research

Follow the links below to find out more about the research projects in our lab!  You can also find out about lab members' research by visiting their individual pages.

We are studying Petunieae as a model for understanding the predictability of genetic changes associated with flower color evolution at a phylogenetic scale.

A long-standing goal of our research program to elucidate the evolutionary history and biodiversity of the tomato family, Solanaceae. This work incorporates taxonomy, phylogenetics, and biogeography.

We are studying how white-flowered morphs evolve within populations and comparing the genetic basis for this intraspecific variation to the changes involved in transitions to white flowers at the species level in the Iochrominae clade (Solanaceae).

This project uses a combination of phylogenetics, comparative methods, biochemistry, and anatomy to trace the many origins of red flowers in the Solanaceae and test why this flower color remains so rare.

 

We study pollination ecology on a macroevolutionary scale to understand how interactions with pollinators shape the evolution of floral differences.

We are interested in how evolution of the enzymes and transcription factors of the anthocyanin pigment pathway contribute to the origin of new flower colors.