Janice L. Krumm
Associate Professor
BIOLOGY
Widener University
United States of America
Biography
she is passionate about engaging biology undergraduates in research through independent research experiences and student-directed course research projects. she will enjoy working with students from freshman to senior years in all stages of research, helping them develop skills and abilities that will enable them to succeed in any career field, from field ecologist to physician.
Research Interest
current research focuses on the interactions between trophic levels in host plant-herbivore-predator/parasitoid systems. I am currently working with the tulip tree beauty moth in the Northeast U.S. looking at interactions between host plants, caterpillars, and fly and wasp parasitoids that attack the caterpillars
Publications
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Krumm, J.L. (2013). Axial gynandromorphy and sex determination in Branchinecta lindahli (Branchiopoda: Anostraca). Journal of Crustacean Biology, 33(3), 303–308.
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Krumm, J.L., Nagengast, A.A., Moretti, A., Colgan, M., Fisher, K.E., Hy, K.L., Castellante, R.M., & Poslusny, M. (2014). Summer research program on a shoestring budget: Increasing participation in undergraduate research. Perspectives on Undergraduate Research and Mentoring, 3(2), 1–10.