University of Wisconsin-Madison

Faculty Member, Botany

Assistant Professor of Botany

Letters and Science

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 an Assistant Professor of Botany at University of Wisconsin - Madison since August 2006. Previously she was Adjunct Curator of Economic Botany at the Field Museum in Chicago for ~7.5 years. Between her two stints as a student at Cornell (graduate student in the 1990s, undergrad in the mid-1970s), she lived in Maine for 12 years and worked in gardens and greenhouses. Most of her field work to date has been conducted in the central Andean region, including a student Fulbright year in Peru in 1996-7.  She has been active in the Society for Economic Botany, recently serving as its 2009-2010 president.

Contact Information

Homepage:

http://www.botany.wisc.edu/emshwiller.htm

Address:

321 Birge Hall / Botany Department
430 Lincoln Drive
Madison, Wisconsin 53706

Telephone:

Office phone: 608-890-1170

IM:

eveemshwiller (Skype)

 
Journal of Ethnopharmacology
Plant Systematics and Evolution
Conservation Biology

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