peoplepill id: loren-h-rieseberg
American botanist
Loren H. Rieseberg
The basics
Quick Facts
Intro
American botanist
A.K.A.
Loren Henry Rieseberg
Loren Rieseberg
Rieseberg
Places
Work field
Gender
Male
Birth
Place of birth
Alberta, Canada
Age
64 years
Residence
United States of America, USA
Education
Washington State University
Awards
John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship
MacArthur Fellows Program
Darwin–Wallace Medal
(2012)
Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
The details (from wikipedia)
Biography
Loren H. Rieseberg FRSC FRS FRSB (born 1961) is a Canadian-American botanist.
Born in Alberta, Canada, his family moved to the US. He graduated from Washington State University with a Ph.D. in 1987.
He is a Professor of Botany at the University of British Columbia and a Distinguished Professor of Biology at Indiana University, and head of the Rieseberg Lab. In October 2016, he was appointed the Director of the UBC Biodiversity Research Centre, replacing Sally Otto. He is on the editorial boards of numerous journals and has edited Molecular Ecology for many years.
Honours and awards
- 1998 David Starr Jordan Prize
- 2003 MacArthur Fellows Program
- 2010 Elected Fellow of the Royal Society of London, Royal Society of Canada and Society of Biology
- 2012 Darwin–Wallace Medal
Works
- Rieseberg, L.H., and J.H. Willis. "Plant speciation". 2007. Science 317:910-914.
- Rieseberg, L.H., T.E. Wood, and E. Baack.2006."The nature of plant species". Nature 440:524-527.
- Harter, A.V., K.A. Gardner, D. Falush, D.L. Lentz, R. Bye, L.H. Rieseberg.2004."Origin of extant domesticated sunflowers in eastern North America". Nature 430:201-205.
- Burke, J.M., and L.H. Rieseberg. 2003. "The fitness effects of transgenic disease resistance in wild sunflowers". Science 300:1250.
- Rieseberg, L.H., O. Raymond, D.M. Rosenthal, Z. Lai, K. Livingstone, T. Nakazato, J.L. Durphy, A.E. Schwarzbach, L.A. Donovan, and C. Lexer. 2003. "Major ecological transitions in annual sunflowers facilitated by hybridization". Science 301:1211-1216.
- Rieseberg, L. H., A. Widmer, M. A. Arntz, and J. M. Burke. 2002. "Directional selection is the primary cause of phenotypic diversification". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 99:12242-12245.
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Loren H. Rieseberg