Jordan Satler
Jordan Satler

Arrival and Departure

May 26 to June 7

About me

I am an evolutionary biologist interested in how ecological interactions among species contribute to generating shared patterns of diversification, the evolutionary processes structuring genetic variation within and among species, and the mechanisms that lead to speciation. I primarily focus my research on arthropods (and the plants with which they interact), where a wide range of life history traits and ecologies provides ample opportunity to ask key questions spanning micro- and macroevolutionary timescales.

I am currently a postdoc in the Carstens lab at The Ohio State University. I have a Master’s degree from San Diego State University (trapdoor spider systematics) and a PhD from The Ohio State University (carnivorous pitcher plant community phylogeography).

Contact

Department of Evolution, Ecology and Organismal Biology
Museum of Biological Diversity
The Ohio State University
1315 Kinnear Road
Columbus, Ohio 43212

email: jordansatler@gmail.com, satler.1@osu.edu
twitter: @jordandsatler
github: https://github.com/jordansatler

Website

website: https://jordansatler.github.io

Selected Publications

Satler JD, Herre EA, Heath TA, Machado CA, Zuniga AG, Nason JD. 2022. Genome-wide sequence data show no evidence of admixture and introgression among pollinator wasps associated with a community of Panamanian strangler figs. Molecular Ecology, 31:2106–2123. (DOI: 10.1111/mec.16373)

Satler JD, Carstens BC, Garrick RC, Espindola A. 2021. The phylogeographic shortfall in hexapods: a lot of leg work remaining. Insect Systematics and Diversity, 5:1–18. (DOI: 10.1093/isd/ixab015)

Satler JD, Herre EA, Jander KC, Eaton DAR, Machado CA, Heath TA, Nason JD. 2019. Inferring processes of coevolutionary diversification in a community of Panamanian strangler figs and associated pollinating wasps. Evolution, 73: 2295–2311. (DOI: 10.1111/evo.13809)