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Adjunct Professors
 
Name:
Thedore H. Fleming
Education:
Ph.D
Positions:
 
Academic title:
Professor
Postal Code:
 
Subject categories:
Ecology
Mailing Address:
 
E-mail:
tfleming@fig.cox.miami.edu

Resume:
 

Direction:
 
 Ecology
 Plant-pollinator interactions

Achievements:
 

Article:
 
 Wilkinson, G. S., and T. H. Fleming.  1996.  Migration and evolution of lesser long-nosed bats, Leptonycteris curasoae, inferred from mitochondrial DNA.  Molecular Ecology: 5: 329-339.

 Fleming, T. H., S. Maurice, and J. L. Hamrick.  1998.  Geographic variation in sex ratios in the trioecious cactus Pachycereus pringlei: the role of Leptonycteris bats.  Evol. Ecology 12: 279-289.

 Fleming, T. H., and J. N. Holland.  1998.  The evolution of obligate mutualisms: the senita cactus and senita moth.  Oecologia 114: 368-375.

Fleming, T. H.  2000.  Pollination of  Sonoran Desert cacti.  American Scientist 88: 432-440.

 Fleming, T. H., C. T. Sahley, J. N. Holland, J. D. Nason, and J. L. Hamrick.  2001.  Sonoran Desert columnar cacti and the evolution of generalized pollination systems.  Ecological Monographs 71: 511-530.

Fleming,  T. H. and A. Valiente-Banuet (eds.).  2002.  Columnar cacti and their mutualists: evolution, ecology, and conservation.  University of Arizona Press, Tucson, AZ.

Research of Current and Recent Graduate Students:

 Ferrari, M.   The effects of  forest fragmentation on populations of Eschweilera coriacea (Lethycidaceae) in eastern Brazil

 Holland, JN.  Linking ecological processes with mutualistic outcomes in an obligate pollination mutualism.

McCain, C.  Effects of forest fragmentation on plant-animal interactions in the Brazilian Amazon.

Muchhala, N.  Evolution of hummingbird- and bat-pollination in Ecuadorian Campanulaceae.

 Nassar, J.  Pollination systems and genetic structure of five species of Venezuelan cacti.

 Newton, L.  Migration and  genetic structure of two species of neotropical nectar-feeding bats.

 Sahley, CT.  Bat and hummingbird pollination of two species of columnar cacti: effects on fruit production and pollen dispersal.

 Wright, D.  Diet and food choice in the dwarf cassowary in Papua New Guinea.

Community service:
 

Commitment to research the situation: