Gordon Frankie
Gordon Frankie is a professor and research
entomologist in the Division of Insect Biology, College of
Natural Resources, University of California, Berkeley. His
specialty is behavioral ecology of solitary bees in wildland
and urban environments of California and Costa Rica. He also
teaches conservation and environmental problem-solving at
U.C. Berkeley.
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Robbin
Thorp
Robbin W. Thorp is Professor Emeritus of Entomology
at the University of California, Davis. He retired in 1994
after 30 years of teaching, research, and mentoring graduate
students. He continues to conduct research on pollination
biology and ecology, systematics, biodiversity and conservation
of bees. He has special interests in native bees of the vernal
pool ecosystem. For more information on life history and pollination
by these bees, see: www.vernalpools.org/Thorp/.
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Rollin Coville
Rollin received his Ph.D. degree in Entomology from the University of California at Berkeley in 1978. He recently retired from AT&T where he served as a systems analyst and programmer. For more than 25 years his primary outside interest has been photographing insects and spiders. He also has a strong interest in the biology and behavior of Hymenoptera and has published papers on Trypoxylon wasps and Centris bees.
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Mary Schindler
Mary Schindler is a recent graduate from U.C.
Berkeley who became involved in Dr. Gordon Frankie's bee research
4 years ago. Since she began this research, she has had the
opportunity to watch thousands of bees in action as they interact
with flowers (natives and exotics) in the urban and natural
environment. The aspect of her research she most enjoys is
fieldwork, which involves wandering around in nature reserves
and beautiful residential gardens, observing gorgeous flowers,
and counting bees at work.
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Barbara Ertter
Barbara Ertter (website)
is Curator of Western North American Flora at the University
and Jepson Herbaria (website)
of the University of California at Berkeley. Areas of
expertise include the East Bay flora, development of natural
history institutions in California, and the taxonomy of various
Rosaceae (Rosa, Potentilla, Ivesia, Horkeli) and Juncaceae
(Juncus). Her role in the team is identifying the plants
used by urban bees.
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Vicki Wojcik
Victoria Wojcik is a Ph.D. candidate in the Frankie Lab focusing her dissertation work on urban bee habitats, both in North and Central America. Victoria is a native of Toronto, Canada. She received her undergraduate degree in Honours Biology from the University of Guelph (Ontario, Canada) in 2004. Prior to beginning her graduate studies at Berkeley Victoria worked at the Ontario Science Centre in outreach and education. She has also worked at the Toronto Zoo as a researcher and invertebrate keeper’s assistant. The primary interest of Victoria’s graduate work is the examination of urban environments for characteristics that can serve as resources for native bees. She is currently working to develop a habitat suitability model that will characterize the urban landscape in terms of conservation priority areas for native bees. In addition to her fieldwork Victoria is very active in public outreach activities and efforts to make University level academic pursuits accessible to the general public.
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Jennifer
Hernandez
Jennifer Hernandez is a Ph.D. student
in Gordon Frankie's lab. She received her M.S. in insect physiology
with a thesis on the metabolism of the carpenter ant. Upon
joining the Frankie lab she shifted her focus from physiology
to entomology and habitat restoration. Jennifer works along
Putah Creek in Northern California investigating changes in
native ant and bee populations after habitat restoration.
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Jamie Paquin
Jaime is an undergraduate in the College of Natural Resources. She is pursuing a degree in Conservation and Resource Studies with a focus on Restoration Ecology. Jaime transferred to UC Berkeley in 2006 from Columbia College in Sonora, CA, with an Associate of Science in Natural Resources. She has a strong interest in California native plants and how they can be used in restoration efforts.
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