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Looking for Najas in a Louisiana cypress swamp |
An Everglades 'gator watches as we search for aquatic plants |
Eriocaulon plants with some visiting insects |
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Male spathe of Vallisneria natans (photo by Lei Chen) |
Seeds (left to right) of Najas flexilis, N. muenscheri, N. guadalupensis |
A rare chasmogamous flower of Glossostigma cleistanthum |
Nymphaea 'William
Phillips',
the
world's
first
intersubgeneric
hybrid waterlily |
Leaf x-section of Glossostigma cleistanthum |
| Aquatic plants are of interest to
systematic
biologists because many of
the groups are
quite ancient, exhibit extreme plasticity and reduction in form, and
generally have been poorly studied. We
reconstruct the evolutionary history (phylogeny) of aquatic plants
using a combination of morphological and molecular (DNA sequence) data,
which facilitates their evolutionary study. Results of our
research are used to improve the taxonomy of various aquatic plant
groups. Some of our past and present projects have included: |
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![]() 2009 workshop on seagrass dispersal (Perth, Australia) |
I also am the director of the CONN herbarium, which houses the department's collection of plant specimens used for research, teaching and outreach. These collections include fossil plants, nonvascular plants, algae, and fungi as well as flowering plants (angiosperms). |