UK-US academic biologist
Janis Antonovics FRS (Latvian: Jānis Antonovics; born 1942 in Riga, Reichskommissariat Ostland) is an American biologist, and Lewis and Clark Professor of Biology, at University of Virginia.[1]
Life
He was educated at Gravesend Grammar School (1953-1960), graduating from Clare College, Cambridge with a B.A. in 1963, and from University of Wales with a Ph.D. in 1966.
He lectured at Institute for Advanced Study, Berlin.[2]
Honors
He is a 1991 Guggenheim Fellow.[3]
He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1988.[4] He was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1992.[5] He won the 1999 Sewall Wright Award.
Publications
Antonovics is the author or co-author of well over 150 scientific publications and book chapters from the 1960s until the 2020s. These include:
- Antonovics, J. 2005. "Plant venereal diseases: insights from a messy metaphor". New Phytologist 165: 71–80.[6]
- Antonovics, J., Hood, M. E., and Baker, C. H. 2006. "Was the 1918 flu avian in origin?" Nature 440: E9[6]
- Antonovics, J., Abbate, J.L., Baker, C. H., Daley, D., Hood, M. E., Jenkins, C. E., Johnson, L. J., Murray, J. J., Panjeti, V., Volker H. W. Rudolf, V. W. H., Sloan, D., Vondrasek, J. 2007. "Evolution by any other name: antibiotic resistance and avoidance of the e-word". PLOS Biology 5: e30.[6]
- Rudolf, V., and Antonovics, J. 2007. "Disease transmission by cannibalism: rare event or common occurrence?" Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, Series B 274:1205-10 [6]
- J Antonovics, AD Bradshaw, RG Turner (1971) Heavy metal tolerance in plants. Advances in ecological research 7 1-85
References
External links
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