The Department of Ecology and Evolution at Stony Brook was founded in 1969 and was
one of the first departments of its kind in the world. The department and graduate
program has an international reputation in the fields of evolutionary biology and
ecology.
PROGRAMS AND PEOPLE
AREAS OF STUDY
Particular areas of strength in our graduate program include population genetics,
conservation ecology, molecular evolution and phylogenetics, ecosystem ecology, evolutionary
genomics, species interactions, invasion ecology, marine and freshwater ecology, and
primate evolution and behavior.
The faculty includes one member of the National Academy of Sciences, 5 fellows of
the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, five past presidents of the Society for
the Study of Evolution and the American Society of Naturalists, past president of
the American Malacological Society, and past president of the American Institute of
Biological Sciences.
Faculty members are active in a variety of major professional societies and have served
as Editors, Associate Editors and members of editorial boards of major scientific
journals.
A number of text books written by our current and emeritus faculty members are the
standards in their field, including Sokal and Rohlf'sBiometry, Futuyma’s two texts,Evolution and Evolutionary Biology, Gurevitch et al.’sThe Ecology of Plants, and Levinton'sMarine Biology. Faculty members from our department have written classic books that helped shape
modern ecology and evolution: George William'sAdaptation and Natural Selection, Slobodkin'sGrowth and Regulation of Animal Populations, and Sokal and Sneath'sNumerical Taxonomy. More recent books written or edited by faculty members includeDemographic Toxicity: Methods in Ecological Risk Assessment and Species Conservation
and Management: Case Studiesby Akçakaya and colleagues, Bell and Foster’sEvolutionary Biology of the Threespine Stickleback, Ginzburg and Colyvan’sEcological Orbits: how planets move and populations grow,Design and Analysis of Ecological Experimentsby Scheiner and Gurevitch, Levinton’sThe Hudson River Ecosystem and Genetics, Paleontology and Macroevolution, and Pigliucci’sMaking Sense of Evolution and Phenotypic Evolution, among others.
Stony Brook has been the home of theQuarterly Review of Biologysince its inception.
Graduates of the Ph.D. Program at Stony Brook have gone on to a variety of successful
careers, including faculty positions at a variety of prominent research institutions
in the U.S. and abroad, as well as positions with conservation organizations, small
colleges, consulting firms, and various governmental agencies.
The Program faculty currently consists of the 19 current faculty members of the Department
of Ecology and Evolution, as well as 13 members of other Departments on campus, including
Anatomy, Anthropology, Biochemistry, Chemistry, Marine Sciences, Neurobiology and
Behavior, Psychology, and Sociology. At any one time, there are about 50 graduate
students in the Program.