
Professor Sergio Rasmann
sergio.rasmann@unine.ch
D225
+41 32 718 23 37
See also naturethinking.com
Post-doc in Evolutionary Ecology, Cornell University, 2007-2011
PhD in Life Sciences, University of Neuchâtel, 2006
Msc in Ecology, University of Neuchâtel, 2002
Synopsis of our research
Nearly three quarters of the world’s macroscopic biodiversity is tied up in the look between plants, herbivores, predators, and decomposers. In this context, the study of trophic interactions, involving plants, herbivores, and their predators or parasitoids represents a frontier in ecology, and this knowledge can be integrated in environmentally sound agricultural pest managements.
Over the last half century, complementary theories and hypotheses have been developed to try to explain the extraordinary variation in plant defensive strategies against herbivores, and, thanks to interdisciplinary interaction between ecologist, behaviorists, physiologist, and chemists, it has given rise to the body of work, collectively known as “plant defense theory”. Nowadays, advances in community phylogenetic and metabolomic analysis are the key components for refining plant defense theories at a novel frontier.
In (1964), Ehrlich and Raven, in their classic treatise defining “coevolution”, suggested that community evolution was “one of the still least understood aspects of population biology”. Remarkably, they argued that it was time for the melding of community ecology, biochemical analysis, and macroevolutionary studies. Impressively, only in the last few years, or perhaps only in the coming decade, will we be able to fully tackle this goal.
Below is the outline of our contributions to the new coevolutionary synthesis:
Teaching activities
Services