Education:
- B.S. The American University (Washington, D.C.)
- M.S Florida Atlantic University (Boca Raton, Fl.)
- Ph.D. University of Miami School of Marine
& Atmospheric
Sciences (Miami, Fl.) Upjohn Research Fellow
Postdoctoral and Professional:
Postdoctoral Fellow, Papanicolaou Cancer Research Institute
Oak
Ridge Faculty Fellow, Puerto Rico Nuclear Center Florida International
University Research Excellence Award 1987
Assistant Professor, Dept. of Biological Sciences until 1977
Associate Professor until 1988
Chair, Dept. of Biological Sciences (23 faculty, 10
staff) 1988-91
Professor, 1988-present
University award for outstanding undergraduate teaching,
1995
Associate chair, Dept. of Biological Sciences (40 faculty, 15 staff)
1999-2003
Research: Coral biology, structure, histology, cytochemistry
Teaching:
- General Biology
- Introduction to Marine Biology (non-majors),
- Comparative Zoology
- Marine Biology and Oceanography
- Electron Microscopy
|
Mycetophyllia reesi, a coral without
tentacles, is fed with blue-dyed food which is trapped in mucus
within minutes.
|
Recent Publications
2001a. The sclerites and geographic
distribution of the gorgonian Swiftia exserta (Coelenterata: Octocorallia:
Holaxonia).Bull. Biological Soc. Wash. 10: 100-109.
2001b. Acid polysaccharides in the skeletal
matrix and calicoblastic epithelium of the stony coral Mycetophyllia
reesi.Tissue and Cell 33: 376-387.
2001c. Desmocytes in the calicoblastic epithelium
of the stony coral Mycetophyllia reesi and their attachment to
the skeleton. Tissue
and Cell 33: 388-394.
2002a. Feeding behavior, epidermal structure
and mucus cytochemistry of the scleractinian Mycetophyllia reesi,
a coral without tentacles.
Tissue and Cell 34: 232-245.
2002b. Gastrodermal structure and feeding
responses in the scleractinian Mycetophyllia reesi, a coral with
novel digestive filaments.
Tissue and Cell 34: 246-261.
2004. Epidermal structure of the scleractinian coral Mycetophyllia
ferox: light-induced vesicles, copious mucocytes and sporadic
tentacles. 7th International Coelenterate Biology Symposium. Hydrobiologia
530/531: 451-458. Abstract
In preparation: The Biology of Reefs and Reef Organisms. Text for
advanced undergraduates and beginning graduate students. Jones and
Bartlett Publishers, estimated completion date: Dec. 2009.
|
After feeding, snake-like gastrodermal filaments appear from the mouth
to bring mucus and trapped food material into the coelenteron.
|
|