Postponed Anthony Nearman, PhD candidate: Honey Bee Colony Morbidity

Zoom presentation: Click to join meeting

After completing a BA in Cell Biology and Molecular Genetics at the University of Maryland in 2014, Anthony first joined the vanEngelsdorp Bee Lab as a lab and field technician for Bee Informed Partnership. Over the next two years, he discovered a love for bees and beekeeping and decided to pursue a PhD. Anthony’s primary research focus is honey bee pathophysiology and its relationship to colony loss. He is currently developing statistical models that predict colony mortality using pathology and other measures of bee health.

Featured Featured

Dr. Lewis J. Bartlett, University of Georgia: Genetic diversity

Zoom presentation: Click to join meeting

Dr. Bartlett will speak on the topic of genetic diversity.

“My work integrates across ecological and evolutionary biology using techniques spanning mathematical models to field studies. My current focus explores how changes in host ecology affect the ecology of their infectious diseases, and consequences for both pathogen and host evolution. I apply this to managed apiculture in an effort to assist beekeepers in maintaining viable honeybee populations, and includes nutrition, ecotoxicology, and wider integration with agroecology from the perspective of a pests & pathogens biologist.”