|
New Primate Center Director
 |
| Lemurs' boss: Yoder and her new charge |
Twenty-five years ago, as an undergraduate
at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Anne Yoder
toured the Duke Primate Center. A self-described underachieving
student, Yoder says she had always been interested in biology and
animals but had never known what she wanted to do with her life.
After her visit, she says, that changed. She went on to earn her
degree in zoology and to conduct research on the genetics and evolution
of mammals, including lemurs. On August 1, Yoder will join the
Duke faculty and on January 1, 2006, will become the Primate Center's
director.
Yoder Ph.D. '92, now an associate professor of ecology and evolutionary
biology at Yale University, succeeds William Hylander, a professor
of biological anthropology and anatomy, who has been the center's
director since 2001. The Primate Center is the world's only research
and education center devoted to prosimians, a classification that
includes lemurs, lorises, and galagoes. The Duke center has the
world's largest collection of endangered primates.
Provost Peter Lange says that Yoder's appointment represents the
most significant step in Duke's renewed commitment to enhancing
the Primate Center's complementary missions of research, teaching,
and conservation. "The Primate Center's colony of endangered
prosimians constitutes a precious scientific resource," Lange
says. "The center must continue to play an important role
in conservation while also becoming a leader in twenty-first century
studies of these extraordinary animals, which present fascinating
scientific questions and opportunities in the study of evolution,
genomics, and behavior. Under Anne's leadership, these questions
will be creatively addressed by researchers from across Duke and
elsewhere, while also offering students an unparalleled educational
opportunity."
Yoder's appointment, Lange says, builds on a review of the center's
operation, conducted under Hylander, to determine how it could
be better integrated into the overall mission of the university.
The results of the review have led Duke to commit significant new
resources to maintaining and upgrading the center's facilities.
For her part, Yoder says she is enthusiastic about the opportunity
to "help realize the potential of the center as an integral
part of the university's research mission," citing, among
other things, the center's value in studies of evolution. "Lemurs
and their close relatives are a part of the primate family tree
that for the most part has been ignored in trying to understand
humans' place in nature," she says. "Madagascar, where
lemurs evolved, is probably the most productive and exquisite natural
evolutionary laboratory on the planet. And lemurs are the crown
jewels of the evolutionary process there." Evolution research
at the center, she adds, will integrate especially well with the
programs of the new National Evolutionary Synthesis Center--a collaboration
among Duke, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and
North Carolina State University--headquartered at Duke.
Yoder also says she will seek to maintain the center's close ties
with Duke's department of biological anthropology and anatomy and
to establish closer research and education relationships with other
Duke units, including the Nicholas School of the Environment and
Earth Sciences and the Institute for Genome Sciences and Policy
(IGSP). Nicholas School collaborations could enhance the center's
conservation efforts in Madagascar--including field research, efforts
to reintroduce lemurs into protected areas, and a project to develop
a zoological park at Ivoloina.
Among the center's long-term goals is the careful restructuring
of its animal colony, emphasizing species that are of the greatest
scientific and conservation interest, she says. These include nocturnal
species whose evolution, genetics, and behavior remain deep scientific
mysteries. Yoder says the center's enhancement will likely require
additional facilities, including upgraded labs and a building for
animal care and housing.
A Greensboro native, Yoder received her B.A. in zoology from UNC-Chapel
Hill in 1981, and her Ph.D. in anatomy from Duke. She was a postdoctoral
fellow at Harvard University and began her professional career
as an assistant professor of cell and molecular biology at Northwestern
University Medical School. After working as a research associate
for the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago, she joined
the faculty of Yale as an associate professor in 2001 and also
served as associate curator of mammals at Yale's Peabody Museum.
She has received National Science Foundation and L.S.B. Leakey
Foundation grants for her research. Those studies have concentrated
on the genetics and evolution of mammals, especially lemurs, and
on the biodiversity and "biogeography" (study of the
geographic distribution of species) of Madagascar.
www.duke.edu/web/primate/indexNew.html
http://research.yale.edu/yoderlab/
|