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Gerardo Avalos holds a Ph. After obtaining his B. Louis, where he investigated the physiological ecology of lianas using a construction crane to reach the canopy working as a fellow from the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute in Panama. His dissertation examined the light acclimation of tropical lianas to temporal and spatial changes in light availability at the surface the forest canopy. His current research interests include the biomechanics of tropical palms, the carbon sequestration and functional trait ecology of palms, invasive plant ecology, and the functional ecology of hummingbirds including network dynamics across three trophic levels.
After serving for 6 years as the Center for Sustainable Development Studies resident ecologist, Gerardo became the Center Director in I am interested in the physiological adaptations of tropical plants to spatial and temporal changes in the availability of light, especially the characters that are responsible for the expression of plasticity at the extremes of the light gradient in a tropical forest: the understory and the canopy.
My research have covered different groups, including birds, insects, and plants, and currently include the biomechanics of tropical palms, functional trait ecology, carbon sequestration, and the ecological morphology of hummingbirds especially sexual size dimorphism.
This project examines the symbiotic relationships between plants, hummingbirds, and mites in a tropical cloud forest. By capturing hummingbirds, collecting pollen and mites from hummingbird plumage, and using action cameras to record flower visitation, we are mapping the web of interaction across three trophic levels pollinators, plants, and nectar-eating mites.