Elizabeth Stacy and Donald Price (both Life Sciences), along with two former graduate students from the Stacy lab, have a paper in press, "Varieties of the Highly Dispersible and Hypervariable Tree, Metrosideros polymorpha, Differ in Response to Mechanical Stress and Light Across a Sharp Ecotone" in the American Journal of Botany. This study examines the drivers of isolation between sympatric populations of long-lived and highly-dispersible conspecific trees, which are poorly understood. The authors looked for the causes of differential local adaptation of the Hawaii Island-endemic riparian tree, Metrosideros polymorpha var. newellii, and its progenitor, M. polymorpha var. glaberrima. Results demonstrate that the riparian zone is harsh and that selection involving the mechanical stress of rushing water, and secondarily light, lead to significant reciprocal immigrant inviability in adjacent forest and riparian environments. These findings suggest that disruptive selection across a sharp ecotone contributes to the maintenance of an incipient riparian ecotype from within a continuous population of a long-lived and highly dispersible tree species.
People in the News
People
| June 16, 2025
Marie Arroyo on Why ºÚÁÏÍø is Her Perfect ‘Port of Call’
This two-time Classified Employee of the Year award winner keeps the dean's office at Lee Business School in shipshape.

People
| June 11, 2025
From Butler to Brand Builder to Cybersecurity Expert: David Shultis
Why the entrepreneur and two-time graduate is bringing his expertise back to ºÚÁÏÍø's cybersecurity classes.

People
| June 9, 2025
Turning Chaos Into Calm: Mariahsen Bautista
The 2024 Classified Employee Rookie of the Year is the organizational powerhouse who keeps Engineering's advising center on task.