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Catherine A. Paris

Senior Lecturer Emerita

Catherine Paris smiling at the camera
Alma mater(s)
  • Ph.D. 1991, University of Vermont

BIO

At present, I teach a diversity of courses in field botany, plant systematics, and plant evolution. A favorite is Field Botany for Natural Resource Professionals (co-taught with Elizabeth Thompson, community ecologist), a fast-paced field course designed to acquaint students with the diversity of vascular plant species in the Vermont landscape. It also emphasizes the organization of those species into natural communities and explores the important ecological determinants of plant distribution. Pictured right, Plant Systematics (PBIO 109) students are puzzling over a set of goldenrod specimens, trying to sort like with like, making sense of the patterns of variation represented therein.

As a member of the at 日韩无码, I have investigated the phylogeography of a set of plant species that are rare around Vermont鈥檚 Lake Champlain but which are common on sand dunes of the Atlantic Coast, including Champlain beachgrass, Ammophila breviligulata subsp. champlainensis, beachpea, Lathyrus japonicus, and golden heather, Hudsonia tomentosa. My own dissertation research was a study of genetic divergence and speciation in the Adiantum pedatum (maidenhair ferns) complex and of the role of geographic and ecological isolating mechanisms in promoting divergence and speciation within it.

Courses

PBIO 108 Morphology & Evolution of Vascular Plants 

PBIO 109 Plant Systematics 

PBIO 369 Field Botany for Natural Resources Professionals 

Area(s) of expertise

  • Plant systematics and evolution

Bio

At present, I teach a diversity of courses in field botany, plant systematics, and plant evolution. A favorite is Field Botany for Natural Resource Professionals (co-taught with Elizabeth Thompson, community ecologist), a fast-paced field course designed to acquaint students with the diversity of vascular plant species in the Vermont landscape. It also emphasizes the organization of those species into natural communities and explores the important ecological determinants of plant distribution. Pictured right, Plant Systematics (PBIO 109) students are puzzling over a set of goldenrod specimens, trying to sort like with like, making sense of the patterns of variation represented therein.

As a member of the at 日韩无码, I have investigated the phylogeography of a set of plant species that are rare around Vermont鈥檚 Lake Champlain but which are common on sand dunes of the Atlantic Coast, including Champlain beachgrass, Ammophila breviligulata subsp. champlainensis, beachpea, Lathyrus japonicus, and golden heather, Hudsonia tomentosa. My own dissertation research was a study of genetic divergence and speciation in the Adiantum pedatum (maidenhair ferns) complex and of the role of geographic and ecological isolating mechanisms in promoting divergence and speciation within it.

Courses

PBIO 108 Morphology & Evolution of Vascular Plants 

PBIO 109 Plant Systematics 

PBIO 369 Field Botany for Natural Resources Professionals 

Areas of Expertise

  • Plant systematics and evolution

Publications

  • Barrington, D. S. and C. A. Paris. (2008). Refugia and migration in the Quaternary history of the New England flora. Rhodora 109:369-386.
  • Walker, P. J., C. A. Paris, and D. S. Barrington. (1998). Taxonomy and phylogeography of the North American beachgrasses. Amer. J. Bot. 85:.
  • Schmitz, S., C. A. Paris, and D. S. Barrington. (1997). Assessment of genetic variation in beachpea (Lathyrus maritimus) populations on Lake Champlain, Vermont. Amer. J. Bot. 84:230.
  • Howard, B. A., C. A. Paris, and D.S. Barrington. (1994). Electrophoretic evidence for allopolyploidy in the Asplenium trichomanes complex in eastern North America. American Journal of Botany 81:130.
  • Paris, C.A. (1993). Adiantum (generic treatment). In Flora of North America, Volume 2, ed. Flora of North America Editorial Committee. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Paris, C.A. (1991). Adiantum viridimontanum, a new species of maidenhair fern in eastern North America. Rhodora 93:105-122.
  • Paris, C.A., F.S. Wagner, and W.H. Wagner, Jr. (1989). Cryptic species, species delimitation, and taxonomic practice in the homosporous ferns. Amer. Fern J. 79:46-54.
  • Paris, C.A., and M.D. Windham. (1988). A biosystematic investigation of the Adiantum pedatum complex in eastern North America. Syst. Bot. 13:240-255.