Colombian-American evolutionary and conservation biologist
Liliana M. Dávalos is a Colombian-born evolutionary and conservation biologist, who is currently living in the United States. Her career as a researcher and professor have focused on bats as model systems and on tropical deforestation.[1]
Education
Liliana Dávalos graduated from the University of Valle, in Colombia, in 1997. In 2001 she was awarded an MA from Columbia University, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences in the Ecology and Evolution Biology program. She continued on at Columbia University to earn her PhD in 2004.[1]
Career
Dávalos has conducted research at a number of institutions, including her undergraduate work at the Universidad del Valle. Her post-doctoral work in the field of genomics was done at the American Museum of Natural History (AMNH),[2] New York, and at the University of Arizona. Dávalos has been an assistant professor and lecturer at Columbia University, the Open University (Milton Keynes, United Kingdom), and Stony Brook University. In 2018 Liliana Dávalos secured the position of tenured professor at Stony Brook University, and has continued to maintained her connection to the AMNH as a Research Associate in the Division of Vertebrate Zoology.[1]
Though Dávalos’ breadth of work has included an array of fields, her primary research efforts focus on the evolution of physiological and molecular traits. Her work utilizes Neotropical bats as a model system for the development of molecular, morphological, and ecological characteristics. Other disciplines practiced by Dávalos include systematics, bioinformatics, geospatial analysis, and the assessment of conservation policy.[3][4]
Notable works by Dávalos have included those on the evolution of frugivorous bats, which has helped illuminate the relationship between species diversification rates and novel morphological characteristics.[5] Her attention to the analysis of methods has produced a substantive critique on the conflict of morphological and molecular tools for studying evolutionary processes,[6] and demonstrated how common sampling bias can drastically affect conservation assessments.[7] She has also performed numerous studies on how conflict and anti-narcotics policies impact deforestation in South America.[8][9]
^Yohe, Laurel R.; Liu, Liang; Dávalos, Liliana M.; Liberles, David A. (2019), Sikosek, Tobias (ed.), "Protocols for the Molecular Evolutionary Analysis of Membrane Protein Gene Duplicates", Computational Methods in Protein Evolution, Methods in Molecular Biology, vol. 1851, Springer New York, pp. 49–62, doi:10.1007/978-1-4939-8736-8_3, ISBN9781493987368, PMID30298391, S2CID52938571
^Reddy, Sushma; Dávalos, Liliana M. (23 October 2003). "Geographical sampling bias and its implications for conservation priorities in Africa". Journal of Biogeography. 30 (11): 1719–1727. doi:10.1046/j.1365-2699.2003.00946.x. ISSN0305-0270. S2CID86109392.
^Dávalos, Liliana M.; Bejarano, Adriana C.; Hall, Mark A.; Correa, H. Leonardo; Corthals, Angelique; Espejo, Oscar J. (15 February 2011). "Forests and Drugs: Coca-Driven Deforestation in Tropical Biodiversity Hotspots". Environmental Science & Technology. 45 (4): 1219–1227. Bibcode:2011EnST...45.1219D. doi:10.1021/es102373d. ISSN0013-936X. PMID21222455.
^Armenteras, Dolors; Schneider, Laura; Dávalos, Liliana María (26 November 2018). "Fires in protected areas reveal unforeseen costs of Colombian peace". Nature Ecology & Evolution. 3 (1): 20–23. doi:10.1038/s41559-018-0727-8. ISSN2397-334X. PMID30478307. S2CID53741734.