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Thomas B. Smith

Acting Director and Professor, UCLA Institute of the Environment
Director, Center for Tropical Research
Professor, Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

Center for Tropical Research
Institute of the Environment
University of California, Los Angeles
La Kretz Hall, Suite 300
Box 951496
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1496 USA

(310) 206-4712 phone
(310) 825-5446 fax
tbsmith@ucla.edu
www.ioe.ucla.edu/ctr
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
University of California, Los Angeles
621 Charles E. Young Drive South
Room LS5120, Box 951606
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1606 USA

http://www.eeb.ucla.edu/

Classes

ENV 121. Conservation of Biodiversity
EEB 114A. Ornithology
EEB 200A. Evolutionary Biology (lecture)
EEB 151B. Field Tropical Ecology
EEV 274. Graduate Seminar in Speciation

Research Interests

Dr. Smith has over 20 years of experience working in the rainforests of Africa, Australia, Latin America, and Hawaii, and has published more than 100 articles. As founder and Director of the Center for Tropical Research, Dr. Smith oversees a host of research projects and directs the research of a growing number of graduate students and postdoctoral scientists on projects based in tropical countries around the world. A central focus of his research is investigating how speciation occurs in tropical rainforests.

Combining molecular genetics and field biology, Dr. Smith identified a new theory of how speciation occurs in rainforests. In a series of studies published in the journals Science, Nature,and the Proceedings of the National Academy, he has shown that for a wide range of taxa in rainforests worldwide, the processes of diversification and speciation take place not only within “biodiversity hotspots” but also along environmental gradients or ecotones representing the transition from one habitat to another. The implications of this discovery are far-reaching. With climate change threatening large-scale shifts in species distributions and the habitats on which they depend, the hotspots of today may not be the hotspots of tomorrow.  The results of Dr. Smith’s research point to new and more effective ways of prioritizing regions for conservation.

Dr. Smith is a frequent consultant to the World Bank and numerous conservation organizations, helping them implement conservation programs and establish new parks in tropical countries. In recent years he has received more than eight million dollars in research funding from the National Science Foundation (NSF), the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), the National Geographic Society, the Environmental Protection Agencies (EPA), the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), the National Institutes of Health (NIH), and the Turner Foundation.

Dr. Smith holds a B.S. in Natural Sciences and an M.S. in Wildlife Ecology from the University of Wisconsin at Madison and a Ph.D. in Zoology from the University of California, Berkeley. He gives numerous invited talks and has received more than a dozen academic honors for his research, including honors from Fulbright, the Zoological Society of London, the California Academy of Sciences, and the American Ornithologists' Union

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Tom Smith with Baka guides in Cameroon Tom Smith and Gediminas Valkiunas testing chickens for infectious diseases in Ugandan village
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