Shane C. Campbell-Staton

Shane C. Campbell-Staton

<p> Shane C. Campbell-Staton Postdoctoral Research Fellow Department of Animal Biology University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana [email protected], (585) 415-4783 http://scholar.harvard.edu/shane.campbellstaton/home</p><p>EDUCATION AND TRAINING</p><p>Postdoctoral National Science Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship Fellow July 2016 – July 2018 Advisers: Dr. Zachary Cheviron, Dr. Julian Catchen Project: Genetic architecture of high altitude adaptation in highland populations of the deer mouse, Peromyscus maniculatus</p><p>Postdoctoral University of Illinois STEM Postdoctoral Fellowship Fellow Department of Animal Biology, July 2015 – July 2016 Advisers: Dr. Zachary Cheviron, Dr. Julian Catchen Project: Genetic architecture of high altitude adaptation in highland populations of the deer mouse, Peromyscus maniculatus </p><p>Ph.D. Harvard University Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, April 2015 Academic Advisers: Dr. Scott Edwards, Dr. Jonathan Losos Dissertation: Temperature-dependent phylogeography of the green anole, Anolis carolinensis</p><p>B.S. University of Rochester Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, 2008 Honors Thesis Adviser: Dr. Richard Glor Honors Thesis: Geographic origins of the captive population of the bearded dragon, Pogona vitticeps GRANTS AND AWARDS</p><p>2016: NSF Postdoctoral Fellowship ($135,000) 2015: University of Illinois Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) Postdoctoral Fellowship ($180,000) 2013: NSF Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant (DDIG) – Temperature-dependent phylogeography and limits of thermal tolerance in Anolis carolinensis ($21,970)</p><p>1 2013: Robert M. Chapman Memorial Scholarship ($4,000) 2012: Putnam Expedition Grant ($10,000) 2011: Robert M. Chapman Memorial Scholarship ($4,000) 2010: Miyata Grant ($4,000) PUBLICATIONS</p><p>PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATIONS * - denotes undergraduate mentees</p><p>PUBLISHED:</p><p>Campbell-Staton SC, Edwards SV and Losos JB (2016) Climate-mediated adaptation after mainland colonization of an ancestrally subtropical island lizard, Anolis carolinensis. Journal of Evolutionary Biology. doi: 10.1111/jeb.12935</p><p>Jaffe AL*, Campbell-Staton SC and Losos JB (2016) Geographic variation in morphology and its environmental correlates in a widespread North American lizard, Anolis carolinensis (Squamata: Polychrotidae). Biological Journal of the Linnean Society (117): 760–774.</p><p>Edwards SV, Shultz AJ, Campbell-Staton SC (2015) Next-generation sequencing and the expanding domain of phylogeography, Folia Zoologica 64.3 (2015): 187-206.</p><p>Munoz M, Crandell K, Campbell-Staton SC, Fenstermacher K, Kim-Frank H, Van Middlesworth P, Sasa M., Losos J, Herrel A (2015). Multiple paths to aquatic specialization in four species of Central American Anolis lizards. Journal of Natural History 49:1717-1730</p><p>Campbell-Staton, SC, Goodman, R, Backstrom, N, Losos, JB, Edwards, SV, and Kolbe, J (2012). Out of Florida: mtDNA reveals effects of Pleistocene glaciations on migration and population expansion in Anolis carolinensis. Ecology and Evolution 2(9): 2274-84. doi:10.1002/ece3.324</p><p>IN PREPARATION:</p><p>Campbell-Staton SC, Bare A, Losos JB, Cheviron ZC. Geographic patterns of metabolic conservation predict variation in cold tolerance among populations of the green anole, Anolis carolinensis.</p><p>Campbell-Staton SC, Cheviron ZC, Losos JB, Edwards SV. Rapid evolutionary response to Polar Vortex-mediated winter storms in populations of the green anole. A short presentation of part of this research can be found here: http://www.gsas.harvard.edu/harvard_horizons/horizon_scholar_campbell-staton.php</p><p>2 PRESENTATIONS</p><p>ORAL PRESENTATIONS</p><p>2016: Evolution Meeting Presentation Title: Polar vortex cold wave elicits raptid physiological, regulatory and genetic shifts in populations of the green anole, Anolis carolinensis.</p><p>2016: Society of Integrative and Comparative Biology Presentation Title: Polar Vortex-mediated shifts in thermal physiology in the green anole, Anolis carolinensis</p><p>2015: Harvard Horizons Symposium Presentation Title: Cold-blooded insights into climate change adaptation</p><p>2014: Society of Integrative and Comparative Biology Presentation Title: Physiological and genomic underpinnings of variation in cold tolerance of the green anole, Anolis carolinensis</p><p>2013: Invited Seminar, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Presentation Title: Temperature-dependent phylogeography and physiological divergence within the green anole, Anolis carolinensis</p><p>POSTER PRESENTATIONS</p><p>2011: American Genetics Association Meeting, Irapuato, Mexico Campbell-Staton, SC, Goodman, R, Backstrom, N, Losos, JB, Edwards, SV, and Kolbe, J. Phylogeographic analysis of the green anole, Anolis carolinensis</p><p>2009: Anolis Symposium VII, Harvard University Campbell-Staton, SC, Munoz, M, Crandell, K. Fenstermacher, K, Kim-Frank, H, Van Middlesworth, Losos, J, Herrel, A microstructural habitat partitioning of Panamanian anole lizards</p><p>RESEARCH EXPERIENCE</p><p>2015 – present University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana, IL Postdoctoral Research Fellow Project: Genetic architecture of high altitude adaptation in highland populations of the deer mouse, Peromyscus maniculatus. Integrating physiology, quantitative genetics, functional genomics and bioinformatics to understand the evolution and adaptive modification of complex traits.</p><p>3 2009 – 2015 Harvard University, Cambridge, MA Ph.D Candidate Dissertation Research: Temperature-dependent phylogeography of the green anole, Anolis carolinensis. Utilizing phylogeography, environmental niche modeling, genome sequencing (RADseq), transcriptomics, and experimental physiology to explore environmental influences on evolution and adaptation within a wide spread reptile species.</p><p>Summer 2013 University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Visiting Researcher Thesis Chapter: Variation and plasticity of cold tolerance and subordinate physiological traits in Anolis carolinensis across a latitudinal transect. Caught 150 lizards from five localities from southern Texas to southeast Oklahoma that were housed in a colony at the UIUC campus. Gained experience in respirometry techniques and data analysis, performed cold tolerance assays, and collected tissues for transcriptomic and enzymatic assays.</p><p>2008 – 2009 Harvard University, Cambridge, MA Field Technician Research Project: Behavioral diversification of mainland anolis lizards. Collected and scored behavioral video data for 15 species of mainland anole lizards and captured animals for bite force measurements.</p><p>2008 – 2009 University of Rochester, Rochester, NY Laboratory Technician Research Project: Genomic DNA extraction and analysis of the Anolis lizard phylogeny. Extracted DNA from over 100 species of anole lizards, compiled database of all species, locality and sequence information, and conducted phylogenetic studies of relatedness between species using Bayesian techniques (Mr. Bayes)</p><p>2006 – 2008 University of Rochester, Rochester, NY Undergraduate Researcher Undergraduate Thesis: Geographic origins of the captive U.S population of the bearded dragon, Pogona vitticeps. Collected shed skin tissues from breeders nation-wide, developed a protocol for DNA extraction from non destructive tissue sampling, and used resultant sequence data in a maximum likelihood framework to reconstruct phylogenetic relationships between captive individuals and their native counterparts</p><p>2005 University of Rochester, Rochester, NY NSF - Research Experience for Undergraduates</p><p>4 Research Projects: Morphological phylogenetics of the Megachildae bee family and Pollination behavior of Chihuahuan Desert bee species. Characterized and catalogued morphological variation across species of Megachilid bee and constructed phylogenetic relationships between species using maximum parsimony TEACHING EXPERIENCE 2015 Harvard University, Introduction to Graduate Studies in Organismic and Evolutionary Biology</p><p>2014 Harvard University, The Biology of Superheroes: Exploring the Limits of Form and Function, Primary Lecturer</p><p>2013 Harvard University, Freshman Seminar 24p: Getting to Know Darwin, Teaching Fellow</p><p>2011 & 2012 Harvard University, OEB 10: Foundations in Biological Diversity, Teaching Fellow COMMUNITY SERVICE & OUTREACH</p><p>2014 Manuscript Reviewer PloS ONE</p><p>2013 – 2015 Resident Tutor, Harvard University Mentor and academic adviser in residence for undergraduate students</p><p>2013 – 2015 Race Relations Tutor, Harvard University Mentor and adviser in issues of race, culture, and disparity for undergraduate students</p><p>2013 – 2015 Mentor, Society for the Advancement of Chicano and Native American Students Mentor for undergraduate students of Chicano and Native American Ancestry. Recruiter for Harvard University Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology</p><p>2012 – 2013 Science Writing Tutor, Harvard University Resource for undergraduates seeking help with scientific papers, grants, fellowships or other issues in science writing </p><p>2012 Manuscript Reviewer Molecular Ecology 5 2010 Mentor, McNair Program - University of Massachusetts, Boston Mentor for undergraduate students from underrepresented groups</p><p>2008 Panel Member - Rochester Higher Education Diversity Panel Interacts with Rochester area public school teachers about issues in minority education</p><p>6</p>

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