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Betsy Arnold
NSF Postdoctoral Fellow in Microbial Biology
Department of Biology
Duke University
aearnold@duke.edu
Education:
B.S., Biology, Duke University (1995) Ph.D., Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona (2002)
Academic post starting January, 2005: Assistant Professor, Division of Plant Pathology and Microbiology Curator, Gilbertson Mycological Herbarium Department of Plant Sciences 1140 E. South Campus Drive Forbes Building, Room 303 University of Arizona Tucson, AZ 85721
Temporary contact numbers: Phone: 520.621.1977 Fax: 520.621.7186
Awards:
Awards of merit 2002 Gentry Award, Best Student Paper, Association for Tropical Biology 2000 Second award, Best Student Paper, Asian Mycological Congress 1999 Outstanding Graduate Student, EEB, University of Arizona
International fellowships 2001 One-year fellowship, PEO International Scholar Award
Intramural fellowships 2001 One-year fellowship, RTG in Biological Diversification, Univ. Arizona 1996 One-year fellowship, RTG in Biological Diversification, Univ. Arizona
Small awards for research and travel 2000-2002 Travel awards, annually, Grad. Council, Univ. Arizona 2001, 2002 Travel awards, annually, EEB, Univ. Arizona 2001 Travel grant, Association for Tropical Biology 1998, 1999 Small grants, RTG in Biological Diversification, Univ. Arizona 1997 Graduate Research Grant, American Society of Plant Taxonomists
Research Interests:
Diversity, ecology, and evolution of fungal endophytes Evolutionary ecology of plant-fungus interactions Fungal systematics and evolution Molecuar ecology Community ecology Tropical biology
Current Research:
Active projects
Phylogenetic diversity of tropical foliar endophytes: a multilocus approach to integrate endophytes into Ascomycota phylogeny
Implications of fungal endophytes for host plant defense, defensive chemistry, and gene expression in woody plants
Diversity and species composition of foliar endophytes associated with Magnolia grandiflora, with special reference to isolation media, unculturable endophytes, and molecular diversity
Diversity, species composition, and evolution of cryptic lichenicolous fungi associated with selected species of Peltigera, with J. Miadlikowska, V. Hofstetter, and F. Lutzoni
Maintenance of endophytic symbioses under altered environmental conditions, esp. with regard to elevated atmospheric CO2; with R.L. Eells, D.A. Henk, F. Lutzoni, and R. Vilgalys.
Diversity and demographic effects of seedborne and seed-infecting fungi for neotropical Cecropia, with J.Dalling and R. Gallery.
Grants:
2004-2006 NSF Collaborative Research Grant, with J.W. Dalling 2003-2004 NSF Postdoctoral Fellowship in Microbial Biology 1999-2002 NSF Doctoral Diss. Improvement Grant, with L.A. McDade 1998-2001 NSF Three-year Graduate Research Fellowship
Publications:
Peer-reviewed:
Arnold, A.E., L.C. Mejía, D.A. Kyllo, E.I. Rojas, Z. Maynard, N.A. Robbins and E.A. Herre. In press. Fungal endophytes limit pathogen damage in a tropical tree. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (USA).
Arnold, A.E. and L.C. Lewis. In press. Ecology and evolution of fungal endophytes, and their roles against insects. Ecological and Evolutionary Advances in Insect-Fungus Associations (F. Vega and M. Blackwell, eds.). Oxford University Press, Oxford.
Lutzoni F, Kauff F, Cox C, McLaughlin D, Celio G, Dentinger B, Padamsee M, Hibbett D, James TY, Baloch E, Grube M, Reeb V, Hofstetter V, Schoch C, Arnold AE, Miadlikowska J, Spatafora J, Johnson D, Hambleton S, Crockett M, Shoemaker R, Sung GH, Lücking R, Lumbsch T, O’Donnell K, Binder M, Diederich P, Ertz D, Gueidan C, Hall B, Hansen K, Harris RC, Hosaka K, Lim YW, Liu Y, Matheny B, Nishida H, Pfister D, Rogers J, Rossman A, Schmitt I, Sipman H, Stone J, Sugiyama J, Yahr R, Vilgalys R, (2004). Assembling the fungal tree of life: progress, classification, and evolution of subcellular traits. American Journal of Botany 91: 1446-1480.
Arnold, A.E. Ubiquity, abundance, and richness of foliar endophytes: consistency among diverse woody hosts in a lowland tropical forest. Submitted 12/2004, Microbial Ecology.
Eells, R.L., D.A. Henk, A.E. Arnold, F. Lutzoni and R. Vilgalys. Assessing diversity of foliar fungal endophytes in a loblolly pine plantation. Submitted 12/2004, American Naturalist.
Arnold, A.E. and E.A. Herre. 2003. Canopy cover and leaf age affect colonization by tropical fungal endophytes: Ecological pattern and process in Theobroma cacao (Malvaceae). Mycologia 95: 388-398
Arnold, A.E. and N.M. Asquith. 2002. Herbivory in a fragmented tropical forest: patterns from islands at Lago Gatún, Panamá. Biodiversity and Conservation 11: 1663-1680. Arnold, A.E., Z. Maynard and G. Gilbert. 2001. Fungal endophytes in dicotyledonous neotropical trees: patterns of abundance and diversity. Mycological Research 105: 1502-1507.
Arnold, A.E., Z. Maynard, G. Gilbert, P.D. Coley and T.A. Kursar. 2000. Are tropical fungal endophytes hyperdiverse? Ecology Letters 3:267-274.
Asquith, N.M., J. Terborgh, A.E. Arnold and M. Riveros-C. 1999. The fruits the agouti ate: Hymenaea courbaril seed fate when its disperser is absent. Evidence from Lago Guri, Venezuela. Journal of Tropical Ecology 15:229-235.
Technical reports and other publications
Arnold, A.E. In press. Fungal endophytes in tropical forests: a case study for assessing biodiversity of tropical microfungi. Current Trends in Mycological Research (S. Deshmukh, ed.). Oxford & IBH Publishing Co. Pvt. Ltd., New Delhi.
Van Bael, S.A., Z. Maynard, N. Robbins, J. Bischoff, A.E. Arnold, L.C. Mejía, D.A. Kyllo and E.A. Herre. In press. Emerging perspectives in the ecology of tropical fungal endophytes. Title TBA, J. White, editor.
Herre, E. A., Van Bael, S.A., Z. Maynard, N. Robbins, J. Bischoff, R. Cordero, A.E. Arnold, L.C. Mejía, D.A. Kyllo. In press. Tropical plants as chimera. Title TBA.
Mejia, L. C., E. Rojas, Z. Maynard, A.E. Arnold, D. Kyllo, N. Robbins, and E.A. Herre. 2003. Inoculation of beneficial endophytic fungi into Theobroma cacao tissues. In Proceedings of the 14th International Cocoa Research Conference, Accra-Ghana.
Arnold, A. E. 2001. Fungal endophytes in neotropical trees: Abundance, diversity, and ecological interactions. In Tropical Ecosystems: Structure, Diversity and Human Welfare (K. N. Ganeshaiah, R. Uma Shaanker, & K. S. Bawa, eds.). Oxford & IBH Publishing Co. Pvt. Ltd., New Delhi: pp. 739-743.
Arnold, A. E., L. Mejía, E. Rojas, Z. Maynard, N. Robbins and E. A. Herre. 2001. Organismos endofíticos: Microorganismos en plantas. (Endophytic organisms: microorganisms in plants.) El Uso de Microorganismos Benéficos en la Agricultura Moderna. Universidad E.A.R.T.H., Guácimo, Limón, Costa Rica.
Arnold, A.E. 1999. Fungal endophytes of tropical trees: methods and potential for biological control of fungal pathogens of cocoa. Proceedings of the Research Methodology of Biocontrol of Plant Diseases Workshop, San Jose: CATIE. Arnold, A.E. 1999. Sustainable cocoa: the fungal community component. American Cocoa Research Institute's Features in Integrated Pest Management for Cocoa: Online, at http://www.oardc.ohiostate.edu/cocoa/main_ftr.htm.
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Photo: D. Maddison
An Opuntia...and Betsy

Photo: A. E. Arnold
Botryosphaeriaceous endophyte of Laetia thamnia, a tropical treelet
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