School of the Earth, Ocean and Environment
Faculty and Staff Directory
Carol Boggs
| Title: | Professor | 
| Department: | Biological Sciences; Earth, Ocean and Environment McCausland College of Arts and Sciences | 
| Email: | boggscl@mailbox.sc.edu | 
| Phone: | 803-777-6869 | 
| Office: | EWS, Room 705A | 
| Resources: | Curriculum Vitae [pdf] My Website Department of Biological Sciences School of the Earth, Ocean and Environment | 

Research Summary:
We focus on evolutionary, functional and behavioral ecology, with applications to conservation and environmental issues. The major question is how environmental change and variation affect life history traits, population structure and dynamics, and species interactions over ecological and evolutionary time. Environments vary on multiple spatial and temporal scales. Additionally, both the abiotic and biotic components of the environment may vary, for example in cases of species' invasions.
We use Lepidoptera as a test system to examine these questions.  Currently, I and
                                 my students are pursuing projects within three broad areas:
1. The physiological, ecological and evolutionary dynamics of resource allocation. 
Allocation of resources is the crucial step connecting foraging and life history traits
                                 such as reproduction, survival, storage and growth. As an additional complication
                                 in Lepidoptera, females use male nuptial gifts (spermatophores) for maintenance and
                                 egg production, linking the allocation budgets of the two sexes. Changes in resource
                                 allocation in response to environmental variation thus affect the expression and evolution
                                 of life history strategies and mating systems. These in turn determine population
                                 dynamics and limits to a species’ range through effects on individual fitness.  We
                                 are currently examining responses to adult and larval nutrient stress, and flight
                                 stress, both in the lab and the field.
example publications: 
Boggs, C.L., and Niitepõld, K. 2016. Effects of larval dietary restriction on body morphology,
                                    with implications for flight and life history. Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata
                                    159:189-196
Boggs, C.L. and Niitepold, K. 2014. Insights from stable isotope tracers on reproductive
                                    allocation under stress. Integrative and Comparative Biology 54:880-889.
Boggs, C.L. and Inouye, D.W.  2012. A single climate driver has direct and indirect
                                    effects on population dynamics. Ecology Letters 15:502-508. 
Boggs, C.L. 2009. Understanding insect life histories and senescence through a resource
                                    allocation lens. Functional Ecology 23:27-37.
2. Invasion dynamics.
Our focus is on the ecological and evolutionary response of native species to introduced
                                 species. Non-native species invading a local community can intrude into coevolved
                                 interactions among native species, sometimes disrupting those relationships. We are
                                 using the native butterfly/ non-native host system of Pieris macdunnoughii / Thlaspi arvense to explore the ecological and evolutionary impacts of such events. Female P. macdunnoughii recognize T. arvense as a potential larval host and oviposit on it; however, resulting early instar larvae
                                 cannot develop on the plant, as the plant is apparently distasteful. Both European
                                 and North American T. arvense are readily eaten by European P. napi. Oviposition preference is affected by both environmental and sex-linked genetic
                                 factors. No detectable genetic variation for larval survival is present, although
                                 hybridization studies with European P. napi indicate that the trait is under autosomal genetic control.  We are currently testing
                                 hypotheses concerning constraints on escape by the butterfly from this evolutionary
                                 trap.
example publications:
Nakajima, M. and Boggs, C.L.  2015. Fine-grained distribution of a non-native resource can alter the population
                                    dynamics of a native consumer. PLoS One 10(11):e0143052. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0143052.
Nakajima, M., Boggs, C.L., Bailey, S.-A., Reithel, J. & Paape, T. 2013. Fitness costs
                                    of butterfly oviposition on a lethal non-native plant in a mixed native and non-native
                                    plant community. Oecologia 172-823-832.
 3. Ecology, evolution and genomics of small populations.
We are using an introduced butterfly population of Euphydryas gillettii in Colorado to address various questions in ecology and evolution. The population
                                 stayed at low numbers for over twenty-five generations after translocation, then underwent
                                 a population explosion followed by fluctuation in population size by orders of magnitude
                                 from year to year. Additionally, the population has been completely isolated since
                                 its introduction, constituting a "Drosophilabottle population genetics experiment" in the wild. We recently discovered a discrete
                                 second population.  We are currently working to understand the drivers of the population
                                 dynamics, but have genetic samples available to address a variety of questions concerning
                                 evolution and natural selection in the wild.
example publications:
Boggs, C.L. 2016.  The Fingerprints of Global Climate Change on Insect Populations.  Current Opinion in Insect Science 17:69-73.
McCoy, R.C., Garud, N.R., Kelley, J.L., Boggs, C.L. & Petrov, D.A. 2013. Genomic inference
                                    accurately predicts the timing and severity of a recent bottleneck in a non-model
                                    insect population.  Molecular Ecology doi: 10.1111/mec.12591
Morris, W.F. et al. 2008. Longevity can buffer plant and animal populations against
                                    changing climatic uncertainty.  Ecology 89:19-25.
Boggs, C.L., Holdren, C.E., Kulahci, I.G., Bonebrake, T., Inouye, B., Fay, J.P., McMillan,
                                    A., Williams, E.H. & Ehrlich, P.R. 2006.  Delayed population explosion of an introduced
                                    butterfly. J. of Animal Ecology 75:466-475.