Benjamin Torke
Assistant Curator, Institute of Systematic Botany
PhD, Washington University
St. Louis (2006)
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Profile |
My primary research interests encompass the systematics, evolution, and biogeography of the Leguminosae, the floristics of the Amazon basin, and the evolutionary and ecological processes that generate and maintain species diversity in tropical tree communities. For this work, I draw on a number of sources of information including DNA, morphology, collection locality data, GIS layers, and extensive fieldwork. I am inspired by a deep love of natural history and an intense fascination and concern that I have for the diversity of life on earth, particularly the diversity of species in tropical rainforests. With tropical ecosystems increasingly threatened by deforestation and climate change, I believe that primary biodiversity research has a fundamental role to play in stemming the impending extinction crisis by providing baseline data to conservation planners.
An overarching goal is to understand the historical, ecological, and evolutionary mechanisms that underlie the diversifications of species-rich clades of Neotropical trees. To this end, I am deeply involved in a long-term international collaborative effort to build a variety of biological datasets for the legume genus Swartzia, which has about 200 species distributed throughout the lowland Neotropics, particularly in rainforests. To date, we have produced the first phylogenetic hypothesis for the genus and have generated phylogeographical data for several clades of Swartzia. We are also compiling large morphological, ecological, and distributional datasets for all of the species of the genus and intend to collect data on breeding systems and chromosomal variation. These data will be used to revise the taxonomy of Swartzia and to test contrasting hypotheses about tropical tree diversification and the assembly of the neotropical flora. In addition to my work on Swartzia, I am developing a project to examine deep relationships and evolutionary trends within the papilionoid legumes and several early diverging papilionoid clades (i.e., the swartzioid and aldinoid clades). These studies and others will be integrated with planned floristic work in central Amazonia, a global center of diversity for leguminous trees.
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