Centre for Ecology, Evolution and Conservation,

University of East Anglia

Research interests of members of staff

CEEC logo

CEEC is one of the largest groups of ecologists and evolutionary biologists in the UK. Research interests of Faculty and Research Fellows and their research interests are listed below, followed by a list of individual project home pages.

The centre also includes a number of post-doctoral research associates and a large group of graduate students. If you are interested carrying out graduate study or post-doctoral research at UEA, it is probably best to make direct contact with members of faculty working in the area that interests you, but general information on studying for a PhD at UEA is available from our postgraduate office.

 Web page   Phone  email  Research interests
 Diana Bell   01603 592177  d.bell@uea.ac.uk Mammalian social organisation and conservation. Rabbit behaviour and ecology
 Ros Boar   01603 593103  r.boar@uea.ac.uk Ecology of freshwaters and wetlands. Nutrient cycling
 Phil Bond   01603 593534  phil.bond@uea.ac.uk Environmental, geological and wastewater microbiology; microbial community composition, ecology and function.
 Tony Davy   01603 592240  a.davy@uea.ac.uk Physiological plant ecology and restoration ecology
 Paul Dolman   01603 593175   p.dolman@uea.ac.uk Biodiversity conservation, landscape ecology and spatial population dynamics.
 Brent Emerson   01603 292947  b.emerson@uea.ac.uk Evolutionary history of species and populations using molecular markers
 Matthew Gage  01603 592183  m.gage@uea.ac.uk Sperm competition and the evolution of sperm form and function
 Jenny Gill
01603 593553 J.Gill@uea.ac.uk Climate change and coastal birds
 Alastair Grant   01603 592537   a.grant@uea.ac.uk Marine Pollution, including pollution tolerance and linking population impacts with physiological and biochemical effects.
Life history biology, elasticity analysis, and matrix population models
 Mark Hassall   01603 592541   m.hassall@uea.ac.uk Soil biology. Woodlice, grasshoppers and geese
 Godfrey Hewitt    01603 592182   g.hewitt@uea.ac.uk Evolutionary genetics and molecular ecology
 Robert James    01603 592243   b.james@uea.ac.uk Invertebrate population ecology, particularly predation, competition and herbivory
 Harriet Jones  01603 592056  harriet.jones@uea.ac.uk Microbial population dynamics
 Gillian Malin   01603 592357  g.malin@uea.ac.uk Biogenic trace gases, biological oceanography, marine microbial ecology, seaweed physiology.
 Carlos Peres   01603 592549   c.peres@uea.ac.uk Ecology and conservation of tropical forests; Vertebrate community ecology; Wildlife population biology in disturbed habitats; Primate behavioural ecology.
 Brian Reid   01603 592357  b.reid@uea.ac.uk Contaminated land, Contaminant bioavailability and bioremediation.
  David S. Richardson 01603 456161 david.richardson@uea.ac.uk Molecular, evolutionary and behavioural ecology. Conservation. Birds.
 William Sutherland   01603 592778  w.sutherland@uea.ac.uk Behaviour and ecology of birds. Conservation and computer modelling
 Andrew Watkinson   01603 592267  A.Watkinson@uea.ac.uk Population ecology, agricultural ecology and climate change
 Douglas Yu   01603 593835  douglas.yu@uea.ac.uk Ecology and conservation of tropical forests; mutualisms and cheating; spatial ecology; trade policy and environment; evolutionary psychology
                
 
	 

Individual project home pages

The population dynamics of Malagasy Chameleons

Marine trace gases

Saltmarsh creation and restoration

Tropical marine ecology

Back to: Back to Centre for Ecology Evolution and Conservation at UEA

Please send comments etc. by e-mail to:
Professor Alastair Grant (A.Grant@uea.ac.uk)

Director,
Centre for Ecology, Evolution and Conservation
School of Environmental Sciences
University of East Anglia
Norwich
NR4 7TJ
UK

Last Updated on: 30th April 2003