Personal Information
Organization / Workplace
Madison, Wisconsin Area United States
Occupation
Associate Professor of Botany
Industry
Education
About
Eve Emshwiller’s research interests center on the ethnobotany, evolution, and conservation of crop plants and their wild relatives. Her research has focused principally on the origin of polyploidy, domestication, and ongoing evolution of the Andean tuber crop “oca,” Oxalis tuberosa, and its wild allies. Her current research includes an international collaborative project on phylogeny of the genus Oxalis and a study of the distribution of clonal genotypes of cultivated oca as an example of the evolution of clonally-propagated crops under human influence. She has been a member of the faculty of the Department of Botany at University of Wisconsin - Madison since August 2006.
Tags
botany
perú
agrobiodiversity
oxalis
south america
south africa
phylogeny
bulbs
oxalis tuberosa
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Likes
(17)Cwr at eucarpia
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Personal Information
Organization / Workplace
Madison, Wisconsin Area United States
Occupation
Associate Professor of Botany
Industry
Education
About
Eve Emshwiller’s research interests center on the ethnobotany, evolution, and conservation of crop plants and their wild relatives. Her research has focused principally on the origin of polyploidy, domestication, and ongoing evolution of the Andean tuber crop “oca,” Oxalis tuberosa, and its wild allies. Her current research includes an international collaborative project on phylogeny of the genus Oxalis and a study of the distribution of clonal genotypes of cultivated oca as an example of the evolution of clonally-propagated crops under human influence. She has been a member of the faculty of the Department of Botany at University of Wisconsin - Madison since August 2006.
Tags
botany
perú
agrobiodiversity
oxalis
south america
south africa
phylogeny
bulbs
oxalis tuberosa
See more