Department of Ecology, Evolution and Marine Biology
University of California, Santa Barbara
Santa Barbara, CA 93106
Email: hodges@lifesci.ucsb.edu
Education:
B.A. | ||
Botany and Biology, University of California, Berkeley | 1983 | |
Ph.D | Botany, University of California, Berkeley | 1990 |
Positions:
1995 - present | Assistant Professor, Dept. of Ecology, Evolution and Marine Biology, UCSB |
1993 - 1995 | Postdoctoral Associate, Depts. of Botany and Genetics, Univ. of Georgia, Athens, GA |
1992 | Research Associate, Dept. of Genetics, University of Georgia, Athens, GA |
1991 | Visiting Assistant Professor of Biology, Barnard College, Columbia Univ. New York, NY |
1983-1990 | Research Associate, Research Associate, Teaching Assistantship at UC Berkeley |
Awards and Honors:
1998 |
UCSB nominee for Packard Fellowship |
1997 | Regents' Junior Faculty Fellowship |
1996 | Regents' Junior Faculty Fellowship |
1994 | Menzel Award, Genetics Section, Botanical Society of America |
1988 | Distinguished Instructor, University of California, Berkeley |
1987-1988 | Regents Fellowship, University of California, Berkeley |
Selected Publications:
Fulton, M. and SA Hodges. 1999. Floral isolation between Aquilegia formosa and A. pubescens. (Submitted, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, Series B.).
Bushakra, JM, SA Hodges, JB Cooper and DD Kaska. 1999. The extent of clonality and genetic diversity in the Santa Cruz Island Ironwood Lyonothamnus floribundus. Molecular Ecology 8:471-476 (cover photo).
Baker, HG, I. Baker, and SA Hodges. 1998. Sugar composition of nectars and fruits consumed by birds and bats in the tropics and subtropics. Biotropica 30: 559-586.
Hodges, SA. 1997. Floral nectar spurs and diversification. International Journal of Plant Sciences 158:S81-S88.
Hodges, SA. 1997. A rapid adaptive radiation via a key innovation in Aquilegia. Molecular evolution and adaptive radiations. pg. 391-405. Eds. T. Givinish and K. Sytsma. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
Emms, SK, SA Hodges, and ML Arnold. 1996. Pollen-tube competition, siring success and consistent asymmetric hybridization in the Louisiana irises. Evolution 50:2201-2206.
Hodges, SA, J Burke and ML Arnold. 1996. Natural formation of iris hybrids: experimental evidence on the establishment of hybrid zones. Evolution 47:2504-2509
Carney, SE, SA Hodges and ML Arnold. 1996. Effects of differential pollen-tube growth on hybridization in the Louisiana irises. Evolution 47:1432-1445.
Hodges, SA and ML Arnold. 1995. Spurring plant diversification: Are floral nectar spurs a key evolutionary innovation? Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, Series B 262:343-348.
Arnold, ML and SA Hodges. 1995. The fitness of Hybrids - A response to Day and Schluter. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 10: 289.
Arnold, ML and SA Hodges. 1995. Are natural hybrids fit or unfit relative to their parents? Trends in Ecology and Evolution 10:67-70.
Hodges, SA 1995. The influence of nectar production on hawkmoth behavior, self pollination and seed production in Mirabilis multiflora (Nyctaginaceae). American Journal of Botany 82:197-229.
Hodges, SA and ML Arnold 1994. Columbines: a geographically wide-spread species flock. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 91:5129-5132.
Hodges, SA and ML Arnold. 1994. Floral and ecological isolation between Aquilegia formosa and A. pubescens. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA 91:2493-2496.
Hodges, SA 1993. Consistent interplant variation in nectar characteristics of Mirabilis multiflora. Ecology 74:542-548.
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