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Domain > chelseamberns.com
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DNS Resolutions
Date
IP Address
2019-09-30
109.200.21.194
(
ClassC
)
2024-09-12
192.187.101.2
(
ClassC
)
Port 80
HTTP/1.1 200 OKDate: Thu, 12 Sep 2024 21:02:43 GMTServer: ApacheLast-Modified: Sun, 11 Feb 2018 18:42:20 GMTAccept-Ranges: bytesContent-Length: 5355Content-Type: text/html !DOCTYPE html PUBLIC -//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd>!--Design by Free CSS Templateshttp://www.freecsstemplates.orgReleased for free under a Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 LicenseName : ProfessionalDescription: A two-column, fixed-width design with dark color scheme background.Version : 1.0Released : 20081230-->html xmlnshttp://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml>head>meta http-equivContent-Type contenttext/html; charsetutf-8 />title>Chelsea M. Berns Website/title>link relstylesheet typetext/css hrefstyle.css mediascreen />/head>body>div idwrapper>div idheader> div idlogo> h1>a href#>Chelsea M. Berns, Ph.D./a>/h1> p>Ph.D. in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology/p> /div> !-- end #logo --> div idmenu> ul> li classactive>a href#>Home/a>/li> li>a hrefresearch.html>Research/a>/li> li>a hrefteaching.html>Teaching/a>/li> li>a hrefCV.html>Curriculum Vitae/a>/li> li>a hreffield_research.html>Additional Experience/a>/li> /ul> /div> !-- end #menu -->/div>!-- end #header -->div idpage> div idheader-pic>/div> div idcontent> div classpost> h1 classtitle>Chelsea M. Berns/h1> /div> div classentry> p>Understanding the origin of biodiversity has been a major focus in evolutionary and ecological biology for well over a century, and several patterns and mechanisms have been proposed to explain this diversity. I am an evolutionary and ecological biologist, interested in the evolution of phenotypic diversity and sexual dimorphism. /p>p>Broadly, in my research I use hummingbirds as a model system to understand evolutionary patterns and the processes of phenotypic change. Hummingbirds offer a unique opportunity to study sexual dimorphism, as they exhibit sexual dimorphism of bill morphology, and elucidate the underlying mechanisms responsible for it. Bill morphology is a critical trait under strong selection pressures due to its role in foraging efficiency, and this morphology can affect niche differentiation among species and between sexes. Thus, I took a microevolutionary approach to examine sexual size and shape dimorphism in hummingbird beaks for my Ph.D. research. I then scaled out to a macroevolutionary picture of how rates of evolution and magnitude of sexual dimorphism affects species diversification and species richness. Using landmark-based geometric morphometrics to quantify these morphological differences, I have been examining rates of phenotypic evolution and morphological disparity both within and between 270 species of hummingbirds. /br> /br>img srcimages/Lake Ontario2.png aligncenter hspace0 vspace0 width325 height300 altLake Ontario2/>/br> /div> div classpost> h2 classtitle>Contact Information/h2> p classbyline>small>Please use the following information to contact me:/small>/p> div classentry> p>Chelsea M. Berns, Ph.D. /br> Department of Biology /br> 1101 Camden Avenue /br> Salisbury, MD 21801 /br> a hrefmailto:cmberns @ salisbury.edu>cmberns @ salisbury.edu/a>/br> /div>div classpost> h2 classtitle>Research and Teaching Interests/h2>ul>p>TEACHING:/p> li>Zoology and Biology, majors and non-majors /li> li>Vertebrate/invertebrate Biology, majors and non-majors/li>li>Environmental Science/li>li>Ecology and Evolution of Reproduction/li>li>Evolution/li>li>Morphometrics/li> li>Ornithology/li>li>Phylogenetics/li>li>Ecology/li>li>Anatomy and Physiology/li>li>Human Anatomy/li>li>Research Methods/li>li>Senior Research/li> p>RESEARCH:/p>li>Phenotypic Diversity /li> li>Evolutionary Biology /li> li>Geometric Morphometrics/li> li>Rates of Evolution/li>li>Ornithology/li>li>Statistics and R Programming/li>/ul>/ul> /div> /div> /div> !-- end #content --> div idsidebar> div idsidebar-bgtop>/div> div idsidebar-content> div idsidebar-bgbtm> ul> li idsearch> h2>Search/h2> form methodget action> fieldset> input typetext ids names value /> input typesubmit idx valueSearch /> /fieldset> /form> /li> li>h2>Links/h2>ul> li>a hrefhttp://www.public.iastate.edu/~dcadams/chelseaberns.html>Adams Evolutionary Lab/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://www.linkedin.com/pub/chelsea-berns/41/479/683>LinkedIn/a>/li>li>a hrefhttps://www.researchgate.net/profile/Chelsea_Berns/?evhdr_xprf>Researchgate/a>/li>li>a hrefhttp://iastate.academia.edu/ChelseaBerns>Academia.edu/a>/li>li>a href http://chelseamarieberns.brandyourself.com>BrandYourself/a>/li>li>a href http://chelseamberns.brandyourself.com/Links>Links/a>/li> /ul> /div> /div> /div> !-- end #sidebar --> div styleclear:both; margin:0;>/div>/div>!-- end #page -->/div>div idfooter> p>© 2012-2015 Chelsea M. Berns. All Rights Reserved. Design by a hrefhttp://www.freecsstemplates.org/>Free CSS Templates/a>./p>/div>!-- end #footer -->/body>/html>
Port 443
HTTP/1.1 200 OKDate: Thu, 12 Sep 2024 21:02:44 GMTServer: ApacheLast-Modified: Sun, 11 Feb 2018 18:42:20 GMTAccept-Ranges: bytesContent-Length: 5355Content-Type: text/html !DOCTYPE html PUBLIC -//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd>!--Design by Free CSS Templateshttp://www.freecsstemplates.orgReleased for free under a Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 LicenseName : ProfessionalDescription: A two-column, fixed-width design with dark color scheme background.Version : 1.0Released : 20081230-->html xmlnshttp://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml>head>meta http-equivContent-Type contenttext/html; charsetutf-8 />title>Chelsea M. Berns Website/title>link relstylesheet typetext/css hrefstyle.css mediascreen />/head>body>div idwrapper>div idheader> div idlogo> h1>a href#>Chelsea M. Berns, Ph.D./a>/h1> p>Ph.D. in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology/p> /div> !-- end #logo --> div idmenu> ul> li classactive>a href#>Home/a>/li> li>a hrefresearch.html>Research/a>/li> li>a hrefteaching.html>Teaching/a>/li> li>a hrefCV.html>Curriculum Vitae/a>/li> li>a hreffield_research.html>Additional Experience/a>/li> /ul> /div> !-- end #menu -->/div>!-- end #header -->div idpage> div idheader-pic>/div> div idcontent> div classpost> h1 classtitle>Chelsea M. Berns/h1> /div> div classentry> p>Understanding the origin of biodiversity has been a major focus in evolutionary and ecological biology for well over a century, and several patterns and mechanisms have been proposed to explain this diversity. I am an evolutionary and ecological biologist, interested in the evolution of phenotypic diversity and sexual dimorphism. /p>p>Broadly, in my research I use hummingbirds as a model system to understand evolutionary patterns and the processes of phenotypic change. Hummingbirds offer a unique opportunity to study sexual dimorphism, as they exhibit sexual dimorphism of bill morphology, and elucidate the underlying mechanisms responsible for it. Bill morphology is a critical trait under strong selection pressures due to its role in foraging efficiency, and this morphology can affect niche differentiation among species and between sexes. Thus, I took a microevolutionary approach to examine sexual size and shape dimorphism in hummingbird beaks for my Ph.D. research. I then scaled out to a macroevolutionary picture of how rates of evolution and magnitude of sexual dimorphism affects species diversification and species richness. Using landmark-based geometric morphometrics to quantify these morphological differences, I have been examining rates of phenotypic evolution and morphological disparity both within and between 270 species of hummingbirds. /br> /br>img srcimages/Lake Ontario2.png aligncenter hspace0 vspace0 width325 height300 altLake Ontario2/>/br> /div> div classpost> h2 classtitle>Contact Information/h2> p classbyline>small>Please use the following information to contact me:/small>/p> div classentry> p>Chelsea M. Berns, Ph.D. /br> Department of Biology /br> 1101 Camden Avenue /br> Salisbury, MD 21801 /br> a hrefmailto:cmberns @ salisbury.edu>cmberns @ salisbury.edu/a>/br> /div>div classpost> h2 classtitle>Research and Teaching Interests/h2>ul>p>TEACHING:/p> li>Zoology and Biology, majors and non-majors /li> li>Vertebrate/invertebrate Biology, majors and non-majors/li>li>Environmental Science/li>li>Ecology and Evolution of Reproduction/li>li>Evolution/li>li>Morphometrics/li> li>Ornithology/li>li>Phylogenetics/li>li>Ecology/li>li>Anatomy and Physiology/li>li>Human Anatomy/li>li>Research Methods/li>li>Senior Research/li> p>RESEARCH:/p>li>Phenotypic Diversity /li> li>Evolutionary Biology /li> li>Geometric Morphometrics/li> li>Rates of Evolution/li>li>Ornithology/li>li>Statistics and R Programming/li>/ul>/ul> /div> /div> /div> !-- end #content --> div idsidebar> div idsidebar-bgtop>/div> div idsidebar-content> div idsidebar-bgbtm> ul> li idsearch> h2>Search/h2> form methodget action> fieldset> input typetext ids names value /> input typesubmit idx valueSearch /> /fieldset> /form> /li> li>h2>Links/h2>ul> li>a hrefhttp://www.public.iastate.edu/~dcadams/chelseaberns.html>Adams Evolutionary Lab/a>/li> li>a hrefhttp://www.linkedin.com/pub/chelsea-berns/41/479/683>LinkedIn/a>/li>li>a hrefhttps://www.researchgate.net/profile/Chelsea_Berns/?evhdr_xprf>Researchgate/a>/li>li>a hrefhttp://iastate.academia.edu/ChelseaBerns>Academia.edu/a>/li>li>a href http://chelseamarieberns.brandyourself.com>BrandYourself/a>/li>li>a href http://chelseamberns.brandyourself.com/Links>Links/a>/li> /ul> /div> /div> /div> !-- end #sidebar --> div styleclear:both; margin:0;>/div>/div>!-- end #page -->/div>div idfooter> p>© 2012-2015 Chelsea M. Berns. All Rights Reserved. Design by a hrefhttp://www.freecsstemplates.org/>Free CSS Templates/a>./p>/div>!-- end #footer -->/body>/html>
Subdomains
Date
Domain
IP
cpanel.chelseamberns.com
2024-09-12
192.187.101.2
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