People
Our lab is made up of a group of curious and friendly folks who like to grapple with complexity in our science.
Our lab is made up of a group of curious and friendly folks who like to grapple with complexity in our science.
We study feedbacks between species interactions and abiotic environmental gradients.
Learn more about the opportunities at our lab, and how you can join.
Congratulations to Dr. Stephanie Coronado and Dr. Anson Call on their successful PhD defenses; welcome new students Joe and Jesper
Graduate student Gabby Mizell leads a new paper from our lab showing that we can use 13C pulse-chase labeling to discover how plants allocate carbon to their mutualist ant defenders.
Graduate student Aramee Diethelm successfully defended her doctoral dissertation yesterday and is headed to a postdoc at UC Davis.
Species interactions, and mutualisms in particular, are often seen as messy, localized processes. Here in the Pringle Lab, we are interested in how and whether mutualisms drive ecological diversity and ecosystem processes at larger scales. We study plant-insect interactions, how they affect plant chemistry, and how variation in plant chemistry across the landscape can impact ecosystem-level patterns and processes.
Interested in studying plant-insect mutualisms and thinking about ecological complexity? Learn more about joining our lab in the link below.