Lyberger Lab
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​Welcome!

As an evolutionary ecologist, my fascination lies in the ways species respond to environmental change.  My research focuses on the role of rapid evolution and species interactions in shaping how populations adapt and respond to various types of environmental change, including extreme climate events and rising temperatures.  I use a combination of approaches spanning mathematical and statistical models to fieldwork and controlled lab experiments. I primarily work in aquatic systems with a focus on mosquitoes.  

I joined Arizona State University as an assistant professor in fall 2024. Prior to that, I was an NSF Postdoctoral Fellow in Biology in the Mordecai Lab at Stanford, studying the impacts of warming on mosquitoes and their parasites. In 2021, I received my PhD in Population Biology from UC Davis where I was advised by Sebastian Schreiber and Thomas Schoener.
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