Matt Ayres


Professor Biological Sciences | Dartmouth College | Hanover, New Hampshire | Matt.Ayres@dartmouth.edu
Climate - Forests - People Image

There are more than a million species of insects. A very few are notable pests that impact human welfare. What makes a pest? I study the population ecology of insects, especially forest pests and seek to understand the forces that lead to dramatic fluctuations in some species.




Publications

Lombardo, J. A., B. T. Sullivan, S. W. Myers, and M.P. Ayres. 2022. Are southern forests becoming too warm for the southern pine beetle? Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 315: 108813. 10.1016

Ayres, M. P., M. J. Lombardero. 2018. Forest pests and their management in the Anthropocene. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 48:292-301.

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Research Interests
Causes of spatiotemporal patterns in the abundance of forest insects and pathogens

The patterning of population dynamics is a prominent emergent property of biological systems. Most of our research explores spatiotemporal variation in the abundance of forest insects, especially those that are sometimes recognized as pests. Study systems include bark beetles, Lepidoptera, wood wasps, scale insects, phoretic mites, and fungi.


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Teaching Philosophy
"It is a poor teacher who is not surpassed by the students."

I teach ecology with a strong evolutionary perspective, an attempt to combine natural history with math, and an effort to work across traditional boundaries of taxonomy and biological organization.


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Teaching
People in the Ayres Lab

  • Current and former Post-Docs
  • Current and former Ph.D students
  • Undergraduate Thesis Students
  • Other Undergraduate Students

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Matthew P. Ayres
Life Sciences Center | 78 College Street
Dartmouth College | Hanover, NH 03755 USA
(603) 646-2788 (office)
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