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Ralph Saporito

Professor - Biology

Ralph Saporito Profile Picture

eMail

rsaporito@jcu.edu

Phone Number

216-397-4492

Location

Dolan Science Center W211

Employee Type

Faculty

Personal Websites

Ralph Saporito Profile Picture

Associate Professor and Graduate Program Director

Degrees:ÌýB.S. in Biology, Florida International University, Miami, Florida. Ph.D. in Biology, Florida International University, Miami, Florida. NSF Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Old Dominion University, Norfolk, Virginia.

Expertise:ÌýChemical Ecology, Tropical Ecology, Behavior, and Evolution, with an emphasis on predator-prey interactions and aposematism.

Research Interests

My research is broadly focused on the ecology and evolution of antipredator adaptations in animals, particularly chemical defenses and aposematism. I am especially interested in studying these defensive adaptations in vertebrates (mainly amphibians and reptiles) that acquire chemical defenses from their diet. Most of my research surrounds the study of brightly colored poison frogs and the arthropod prey from which they sequester alkaloid-based chemical defenses. My research program is highly integrative, involves a variety of comparative and experimental approaches (both field- and lab-based), and incorporates aspects of ecology, evolution, behavior, morphology, natural history, and frog and arthropod chemistry.

Recent Courses

BL 230/231 – Human Anatomy & Physiology &ÌýLab BL 156 – Principles of Biology II BL 159 – Principles of Biology III BL 406 – Tropical Field Biology

Selected Publications

Lawrence, J.P., Rojas, B., Fouquet, A., Mappes, J., Blanchette, A.,ÌýSaporito, R.A., Bosque, R.J., Courtois, E.A., and Noonan, B. (2019) Weak warning signals can exist in the absence of gene flow. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, published online, September 3, 2019.

Saporito, R.A., Russell, M.W., Richards-Zawacki, C.L., and Dugas, M.B. (2019) Experimental evidence for maternal provisioning of alkaloid defenses in a dendrobatid frog. Toxicon, 161:40-43.

Stuckert, A.M.,ÌýSaporito, R.A., and Summers, K. (2018) An empirical test indicates only qualitative honest aposematic signaling within a population of vertebrates. Journal of Herpetology, 52(2): 201-208.

Saporito, R.A.Ìýand Grant, T. (2018) Comment on Amézquita et al. (2018) "Conspicuousness, color resemblance, and toxicity in geographically diverging mimicry: The pan-Amazonian frogÌýAllobates femoralis." Evolution, 72-4: 1009-1014.

Hovey, K.J., Seiter, E.M., Johnson, E.E., andÌýSaporito, R.A.Ìý(2018) Sequestered alkaloid defenses in the dendrobatid poison frogÌýOophaga pumilioÌýprovide variable protection from microbial pathogens. Journal of Chemical Ecology, 44: 312-345.

Ìý

Strawberry poison-dart frog
Oophaga pumilio