Therese Ann Markow

Therese Ann Markow is the Amylin Chair in Life Sciences at the University of California, San Diego. Her research involves the use of genetics and ecology to study the insects of the Sonoran Desert. She was awarded the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers in 2001 and the Genetics Society of America George Beadle Award in 2012.

Therese Ann Markow
Alma materArizona State University
Known forGenetics
Ecology
AwardsPresidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers
Genetics Society of America George Beadle Award
Scientific career
InstitutionsUniversity of California, San Diego
Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education

Early life and education

Markow studied physical anthropology at Arizona State University (ASU). She was a member of the honorary Phi Kappa Phi. She remained there for her doctoral studies, focussing on Drosphila genetics with Charles Woolf.[1] She completed her doctorate in 1974, and spent time as a postdoctoral researcher at Indiana University in the laboratory of Anthony P. Mahowald. Upon returning to Arizona, she held research professor positions before being appointed an Assistant Professor at ASU.

Research and career

Markow was appointed a Professor of Zoology at ASU in 1990. In 1993 she initiated the Minority Access to Research Careers program, supported by NIH, to support students from underrepresented groups pursue careers in biosciences.[2] She served as Director of the National Science Foundation Program in Population Biology. In 1995 she was awarded a Fulbright Program fellowship, which allowed her to pass a semester at the Monterrey Institute of Technology, Campus Guaymas, in Sonora, where she conducted long-term studies on natural populations of cactophilic Drosophila. At Arizona State University she became Regents Professor, the highest honour bestowed upon a faculty member.[3] During her last three years at Arizona State University, she served as Editor in Chief of the journal Evolution.

In 1999, Markow moved to the University of Arizona in Tucson as Regents’ Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and Director of the Center for Insect Science. Upon moving to the University of Arizona, she moved the National Drosophila Species Stock Center to Tucson, establishing annual workshops, with Patrick O’Grady of Cornell University, on the use of species other than D. melanogaster for research. Markow founded the Drosophila Species Genome Consortium, the genomes of 12 Drosophila species were sequenced, assembled, annotated, which expanded the genetic resources available to the research community.

Markow joined University of California, San Diego in 2008, where she was appointed Amylin Chair in Life Sciences and continued as Director of the Drosphila Species Stock Center which moved with her to UCSD. In 2012 she joined the National Laboratory for the Genomics of Biodiversity in Mexico, which allowed her research alongside participating in the training of Mexican graduate students. Since 2013 she has served as one of Mexico's Sistema Nacional de Investigadores (SNI III). Her research recently has focussed upon use of ecological diverse Drosophila species as a models to understand public health problems such as diabetes and obesity.[4] In addition to her studies of ecological and evolutionary genomics of Drosophila, she undertook, with funding from the World Wildlife Fund, studies of the genetics and genomics of monarch butterflies in Mexico.[4]

Havasupai Studies Controversy

In 2007, the Havasupai people, inhabitants of the Grand Canyon, issued a "banishment order" to keep Arizona State University employees from setting foot on their reservation. This banishment was issued as a response to Marko's unauthorized use of DNA samples collected from Havasupai individuals. The samples had been collected with consent to research the community's rate of diabetes. However, tribe members discovered the samples were used without the community's consent to research topics on mental illness as well as theories of the tribe's geographical origins. The latter study published conclusions that contradict Havasupai traditional narratives, which resulted in further relational harm between them and scientific research communities at large.[5] [6]

Awards and honours

Selected publications

Her publications include:

  • Markow, Therese Ann (1995). "Evolutionary Ecology and Developmental Instability". Annual Review of Entomology. 40: 105–120. doi:10.1146/annurev.en.40.010195.000541.
  • Markow, Therese Ann (2005). Drosophila: A Guide to Species Identification and Use. Elsevier. ISBN 9780080454092.
  • Markow, Therese Ann (2007). "Evolution of genes and genomes on the Drosophila phylogeny". Nature. 450 (7167): 203–218. doi:10.1038/nature06341. PMID 17994087.
  • Markow, Therese Ann (2008). "Biological stoichiometry from genes to ecosystems". Ecology Letters. 3 (6): 540–550. doi:10.1111/j.1461-0248.2000.00185.x.

References

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