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Dr.
Donna J. Devlin
PhD. 2004. University of Louisiana at Lafayette
Assistant Research Professor
FAU-Biological Sciences at Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institution
Contact information
Office:Room 221, New FAU Building at Harbor Branch
Oceanographic Institution
Phone:772- 462 0873
Email: ddevlin@fau.edu
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Professional Interests and
Research Program
My
primary research interests are in plant-invertebrate their effect on
community composition, primarily in estuarine and marine settings
(mangrove and salt marsh communities). My work involves studies at
scales that range from molecular (microsatellites, AFLP’s),
organismal (defense compounds, plant physiology), population
(population biology), community (plant-animal interactions, plant-plant
competition) and landscape (mangrove forests and salt marshes,
restoration ecology). All of these studies have a basis in the ecology
and genetics of the animal-plant interactions. On-going projects
include interactions among fiddler crabs (Uca spp.), marsh periwinkle
(Littoraria irrorata), and marsh grass (Spartina alterniflora) during
recovery from hurricanes Rita and Katrina funded by NSF;
co-evolutionary interactions between the red mangrove (Rhizophora
mangle) and a specialist parasitic beetle (Coccotrypes rhizophorae); a
long-term study in mangrove restoration in southwestern Florida, and an
assessment of mangrove impoundments in the Indian River Lagoon funded
by USFWS. I am also interested in mollusk ecology and population
biology/genetics and have conducted studies on mangrove leaf litter
grazing by Melampus coffeus and am embarking on studies of the ecology
and conservation genetics of the queen and fighting conchs (Strombus
gigas and alatus respectively). I have worked in polychaete taxonomy
and maintain an interest in the biology and ecology of many
invertebrate species. Prior to receiving my PhD, I worked for a
national environmental organization and was registered environmental
lobbyist for the state of Florida. My specialty was coastal
conservation and policy and was involved in formulating the coastal
armoring ordinance for the State of Florida and in the designations of
the Archie Carr National Wildlife Refuge and the Keys National Marine
Sanctuary. I was inspired to do conservation work while employed by a
consulting firm where I designed and conducted environmental impact
studies in Tampa Bay.
I
also teach Marine Invertebrate Zoology (both
undergraduate and graduate courses) in the department and am developing
special courses for an NSF IGERT grant proposal for training PhDs on
which I am co-lead PI.
Representative
Publications:
Devlin,
D.J. in prep. Field experiments on the interactions between the
Scolytid parasite Coccotrypes rhizophorae and the host red mangrove
species (Rhizophora mangle). Submission to Ecology.
Proffitt, C.E. and D.J.
Devlin. 2005. Long-term growth and succession in restored and natural
mangrove forests in southwestern Florida. Wetlands Ecology and
Management 13:531-551.
Proffitt, C.E. and D.J.
Devlin. 2005. Grazing by the intertidal gastropod Melampus coffeus
greatly increases mangrove leaf litter degradation rates, Marine
Ecology Progress Series. 296:209-218.
Devlin, D.J. 2004.
Effects of Coccotrypes rhizophora on the population and community
structure of forests dominated by Rhizophora mangle in Florida. Ph.D.
Dissertation, University of Louisiana at Lafayette.
Proffitt, C.E. and D.J.
Devlin. 1998. Are there cumulative effects in red mangroves from oil
spills during seedling and sapling stages? Ecological Applications
8:121-127.
Proffitt,
C.E., K.M. Johns, C.B. Cochrane, D.J. Devlin, T.A. Reynolds, D.L.
Payne, S. Jeppesen, D.W. Peel, and D.D. Linden. 1993. Field and
laboratory experiments on the degredation of mangrove leaf detritus by
Melampus coffeus L. (Gastropoda: Pulmonata). Florida Scientist: 54:
211-222.
Bell S.S. and D.J.
Devlin. 1983. Short term macrofaunal recolonization of sediment and
epibenthic habitats in Tampa Bay, Florida. Bulletin of Marine Science
33:102-110.
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