| Sarah Gilman |
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| Assistant Professor of
Biology |
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| Email: |
sgilman@kecksci.claremont.edu |
| Office: |
Keck Science Center 13 |
| Phone: |
909-607-0715 |
| Office Hours: |
Tu 10:30-12, Fri 1:30-3, or by appt. |
| Web Site: |
http://faculty.jsd.claremont.edu/sgilman |
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| Educational Background: |
B.S. Stanford University
Ph.D. University of California, Davis |
| Courses Taught: |
Bio 064L The Living Sea
Bio 169L Marine Ecology
Bio 44L Introductory Biology
Bio 147 Biogeography |
| Research Interests: |
Marine Ecology
Climate Change Ecology
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| Thesis Topics: |
Students in my lab work on ecological questions involving coastal marine invertebrates. Past/current projects include:
- The preference of predatory snails for native and nonnative oysters in Newport Bay
- The effect of temperature on the metabolic rates of intertidal animals
- The effects of air and water temperature on the feeding rates of predatory snails
- Using sound to monitor the feeding behavior of predatory snails
- The growth and survival of intertidal barnacles under warm and cool temperatures
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| Selected Publications List: Click
to open new window. |
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1.
Helmuth, B., Broitman, B., Yamane, L., Gilman, S.E., Mach, K., Mislan, K.A.S, and M.W. Denny
. (2010). Organismal climatology: analyzing environmental variability at scales relevant to physiological stress. Journal of Experimental Biology
213: 995-1003.
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2.
Gilman, S.E., M. Urban, J. Tewksbury, G.W. Gilchrist, and R.D. Holt
. (2010). A framework for community interactions under climate change. Trends in Ecology and Evolution
25: 325-331.
Article
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3.
Yamane, L and S.E. Gilman.
. (2009). Opposite responses by an intertidal predator to increasing aquatic and aerial temperatures. Marine Ecology Progress Series
393: 27-36.
Article
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