The New England Botanical Society offers awards of up to $3,000 to graduate students to support botanical research. The awards encourage and support botanical research on the New England flora (plants, algae, and fungi), including support for field, lab, and herbarium work, as well as travel to and within New England by those who would not otherwise be able to work in the region. The present budgeted amount for this award is $6000, so it is anticipated that two to three awards will be given each year, although the actual number and amount of awards will depend on the proposals received in a given year.
Applicants do not need to be a member of our organization to apply for this award.
The awards are made to the graduate student(s) submitting the best research proposal dealing with systematic botany, plant ecology, genetics, plant conservation biology, or related fields pertaining to the New England flora. Publications based on the research funded through the award should acknowledge NEBS's support. Submission of manuscripts to the Society's journal, Rhodora, is strongly encouraged.
- 2023
-
Meredith Theus of Cornell University for a project titled "Effects of plant photosynthetic pathway on greenhouse gas emissions from Northeastern wetlands"
Abstract
Andrea J. Tirrell of University of Maine for a project titled "A sky island perspective: New England alpine plant distributions through 40 years of global change"
Abstract
- 2022
Amelia A. Fitch of Dartmouth College for a proposal titled "Investigating the role of mycorrhizal fungi in New England forest management"
Abstract
Joseph Jaros of Fordham University for a proposal titled "Linking plant soil feedback to population dynamics using demographic models of knotweed"
Abstract
Cooper M. Kimball-Rhines of University of Mass-Boston for a proposal titled "Conservation and restoration of Lupinus perennis, a keystone pine barren pioneer"
Abstract
Emmi Kurosawa of University of Mass-Boston for a proposal titled "How carnivorous are you? Seasonal changes in carnivory and prey preference among carnivorous plants of New England"
Abstract
Max McCarthy of Rutgers University for a proposal titled "Effects of flowering phenology on pollination and reproduction of a protandrous plant"
Abstract
- 2021
-
Michael LaScaleia of University of Connecticut for a proposal titled "What role do top-down and bottom-up enemy release play in exotic plant invasion of New England forests?"
Abstract
Madeleine Meadows-McDonnell of University of Connecticut for a proposal titled "Coastal wetland carbon dynamics: testing how salinity and light affect root exudation rates of dominant salt marsh grasses"
Abstract
Amber Stanley of University of Pittsburgh for a proposal titled "Have human-mediated disturbances led to changes in pollination of native flowering plants?"
Abstract
- 2020
-
Jacob Suissa of Harvard University for a proposal titled "The effects of stelar architecture on hydraulic integration in fern rhizomes"
Abstract
Hannah Vollmer of Plymouth State University for a proposal titled "Conservation genetics of two rare alpine roses in the White Mountains of New Hampshire"
Abstract
- 2019
-
Jamie Harrison of Boston University for a proposal titled "Combined effects of growing season warming and winter freeze/thaw cycles on northern hardwood forest ecosystems of New England"
Abstract
Michelle R. Jackson of University of Massachusetts Amherst for a proposal titled "The potential impacts of increased warming and nitrogen on Alliaria petiolata (garlic mustard) physiology across a latitudinal gradient"
Abstract
Fiona Jevon of Dartmouth College for a proposal titled "Do density-dependent feedbacks drive New England temperate tree seedling growth, survival, and diversity?"
Abstract
- 2018
-
Steven Ballou, Jr. of University of Memphis for a proposal titled "Morphology, Ecology, and Population Genetics of Lactuca hirsuta (Asteraceae) on the Cape and Nantucket, Massachusetts, with special consideration of L. hirsuta var. sanguine"
Abstract
James Mitchell of Harvard University for a proposal titled "Diversity and host specificity in the Genus Sarea Fr. (Ascomycota)"
Abstract
Anastasia Mozharova of University of Massachusetts Boston for a proposal titled "Identifying the presence of submersed aquatic plant species at low abundances using the eDNA (environmental DNA) method and next-generation sequencing"
Abstract
- 2017
-
Jenifer Dickinson of Antioch University New England for a proposal titled "Defining the habitat characteristics of four rare alpine plant species in the Presidential Mountain Range, New Hampshire USA"
Abstract
Karl Fetter of University of Vermont for a proposal titled "Reduced hybrid fitness maintains species boundaries in two fully compatible poplars"
Abstract
Ellie M. Goud of Cornell University for a proposal titled "Plant carbon gain and water loss strategies as drivers for the maintenance of diversity: A novel approach using leaf carbon and oxygen stable isotopes"
Abstract
- 2016
-
Kevin Berend of the State University of New York for a proposal titled "Investigating the environmental constraints on a threatened ecosystem: Snowbed communities of Mt. Washington, New Hampshire"
Abstract
Charlie Nicholson of the University of Vermont for a proposal titled "Pollination shadows: Do perennial crops impact the reproductive success of a New England spring ephemeral?"
Abstract
Adam Ramsey of the University of Memphis for a proposal titled "Assessing the risk of Queen Anne's lace (Daucus carota) on the pollination of toothed whitetop aster on Nantucket Island, Massachusetts "
Abstract
- 2015
-
Weston Testo of the University of Vermont for a proposal titled "Systematics of Huperzia (Lycopodiaceae) and taxonomic revision of the North American species."
Abstract
James Wood of the University of Georgia for a proposal titled "Impacts of urbanization on an understudied riverine macrophyte, Podostemum ceratophyllum Michx.: heavy metal accumulation and altered elemental composition in relationship to change in watershed land use."
Abstract
Ellen Woods University of Connecticut for a proposal titled "Understanding evolutionary mechanisms driving the expansion of a New England invasive, Polygonum cespitosum."
Abstract
- 2014
-
Eva Dannenberg of Antioch University New England for a proposal titled "Boreal calciphiles in Vermont, USA: Predictive modeling and examination of rare plant habitat distribution "
Caitlin McDonough MacKenzie of Boston University for a proposal titled "Spring phenology and climate change in Acadia National Park"
Katherine Putney of University of Georgia for a proposal titled "Evaluating the natural arbuscular mycorrhizal fungal communities associated with sexually dimorphic Geranium maculatum"
Abstracts
- 2013
-
Dennis Dietz of University of Massachusetts Amherst for a proposal titled "Inbreeding depression and pollination limitation in Sarracenia purpurea L. ssp. purpurea"
Karoline Oldham of George Mason University for a proposal titled "Geographical history and infraspecific morphological variation of the hemiparasitic wildflower, American Cow-wheat (Melampyrum lineare; Orobanchaceae)"
Abstracts
- 2012
-
Kirsten Martin of University of Central Florida for a proposal titled "Disturbance based management in a changing world: Species composition in Massachusetts sandplain heathlands over the past two decades"
Leif Richardson of Dartmouth College for a proposal titled "Toxic nectar in turtlehead (Chelone glabra): Pollination by self-medicating bees"
Abstracts
- 2011
-
Daniel Robarts of The Ohio State University for a proposal titled "Determining patterns of genetic diversity and post-glacial colonization of Viola pedata (Violaceae) with microsatellite markers"
Abstract
- 2010
-
Alison J. Parker of the University of Toronto for a proposal titled "The effect of pollinator behavior on pollen transfer and floral adaptation across a geographic landscape: Claytonia virginica and Andrena erigeniae"
Abstract
- 2009
-
Lucas C. Majure of the University of Florida for a proposal titled "The Systematics and Evolution of the Opuntia humifusa complex (Cactaceae)"
Abstract
- 2008
-
Kelsey Glennon of George Washington University for a proposal titled "Systematic clarification of the rare New England group of Houstonia longifolia using AFLP with implications for conservation"
Sydne Record of the University of Massachusetts Amherst for a proposal titled "Conservation While Under Invasion: Insights from a Rare Hemiparasitic Plant, Swamp Lousewort (Pedicularis lanceolata Michx.)"
Abstracts
- 2007
-
Benjamin E. Wolfe of Harvard University for a proposal titled "Biogeography, genetic diversity and host specificity of Amanita in New England"
Abstract
- 2006
-
Jonathon Schramm of Rutgers University for a proposal titled "A multiscale analysis of contemporary and historical facilitators of the invasion of an exotic grass into hardwood forests of New Jersey"
Lynn McNamara of the Antioch New England Graduate School for a proposal titled "The geographic and ecological distribution of wild chervil, Anthriscus sylvestris (L.) Hoffm. in Vermont"
Abstracts
- 2005
-
David Ellum of Yale University School of Forestry and Environmental Studies for a proposal titled "Acclimation of shade-adapted understory herbs to seasonal canopy disturbances: incorporating physiology into plant conservation strategies for managed forests of southern New England"
David Hewitt of the Harvard University Farlow Herbarium for a proposal titled "Species delimitations of the ascomycete genus Neolecta in New England based on ITS sequence comparison"
Sara Scanga of the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry for a proposal titled "The effects of demography and the abiotic environment on the rarity and persistence of a critically imperiled wetland wildflower, Trollius laxus (Ranunculaceae)"
Abstracts
- 2004
-
Krissa Skogen of the University of Connecticut for a proposal titled "Using demography, genetic diversity, and the effects of increased nitrogen deposition to understand the decline of Desmodium cuspidatum (Fabaceae)"
Abstract
- 2003
-
Jesse Bellemare of Cornell University for a proposal titled "The Influence of Life History Traits on Patterns of Holocene Migration and Geographic Distribution of Forest Herbs in the Berberidaceae, Liliaceae and Ranunculaceae"
Julie Dragon of the University of Vermont for a proposal titled "The Systematics and Phylogeny of Carex lenticularis and its allies, section Phacocystis (Cyperaceae)"
Abstracts
- 2002
-
Lisa Karst of Portland State University for a proposal titled "Phylogeny of Sisyrinchium (Iridaceae), genetic and morphological evidence"
Isabel Ashton of the State University of New York at Stony Brook for a proposal titled "Invasive, exotic non-invasive, and native woody vines of the northeastern United States"
Abstracts
- 2001
-
Michael Moody of the University of Connecticut for a proposal titled "Phylogenetics, phenotypic plasticity, and potential hybrids in the aquatic plant genus Myriophyllum (Haloragaceae)"
Valerie Reeb of the University of Illinois at Chicago for a proposal titled "Phylogenetics of the Acarosporaceae (lichen-forming Ascomycetes) and Acarospora, and worldwide revision of the species complex A. cervina-A. glaucocarpa"
Rachel Williams of Michigan State University for a proposal titled "Phylogeny of Pycnanthemum (Lamiaceae) with emphasis on high level polyploidy in the Virginianum complex"
Abstracts
- 2000
-
Dirk Albach of the Universitat Wien (Austria) for a proposal titled "Evolution, biogeography and genetic diversity in Veronica alpina L. and related taxa"
Michael Booth of Yale University for a proposal titled "Material flows across ectomycorrhizal networks and plant diversity in New England forests." [resulting work published as "Mycorrhizal networks mediate overstorey-understorey competition in a temperate forest", Ecology Letters, (2004) 7: 538-546.]
- 1999
-
Joel Gerwein of University of Massachusetts Boston for a proposal titled "Long-term effects of forest fragmentation on genetic diversity of red oak (Quercus rubra L.): A comparison of old-growth and secondary forests"
Julie Ellis of Brown University for a proposal titled "The role of nesting seabirds in structuring New England coastal plant communities"
- 1998
-
Sonja Schmitz of University of Vermont for a proposal titled "Inferring evolutionary and biogeographic history from patterns of genetic variation in inland and Coastal Beachpea (Lathyrus japonicus) populations"
David Moeller of Cornell University for a proposal titled "The ecology and evolution of self-pollination in Blue Flag (Iris versicolor): an island - mainland comparison"
- 1997
-
Tatyana Rand of Brown University for a proposal titled "Seed supply, habitat suitability and the distribution of halophytic forbs across a salt marsh landscape"
Thomas Vining of University of Maine at Orono for a proposal titled "Phenology and hybridization of Picea mariana and P. rubens (Pinaceae) in Maine"
- 1996
-
Bruce Henning Lindwall of University of Massachusetts at Amherst for a proposal titled "The genetic consequences of long-term habitat fragmentation"
- 1995
-
Peter Walker of University of Vermont for a proposal titledĀ "Speciation in Ammophila: Sequence variation in the internal transcribed spacer of nuclear ribosomal DNA"
- 1994
-
Andrea Stevens of University of Massachusetts at Amherst for a proposal titled "Paleoecology of sandplain grasslands in Massachusetts"
- 1993
-
R. Deborah Overath of University of Georgia for a proposal titled "Effects of apomixis on genetic variation in Amelanchier laevis"
- 1992
-
Francois Lutzoni of Duke University for a proposal titled "Phylogenetics of Omphalina (Basidiomycetina, Agaricales) and the evolution of lichenization"
- 1990
-
Allison Dibble of University of Maine for a proposal titled "Status of Amelanchier nantucketensis, Nantucket Shadbush (Rosaceae: Maloideae), a narrow endemic of coastal Massachusetts"
- 1989
-
Scott Shumway of Brown University for a proposal titled "Population genetics of a founder species in an incipient salt marsh"
- 1988
-
C. Thomas Philbrick of University of Connecticut for a proposal titled "Systematic studies in Callitriche (Callitrichaceae) in North America"
- 1987
-
Zack Murrell of Duke University for a proposal titled "Systematics of Cornus"
- 1986
-
Debra Dunlop of University of New Hampshire for a proposal titled "Biosystematics of Carex section Scirpinae (Cyperaceae)"
- 1985
-
Warren F. Lamboy of University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign for a proposal titled "A systematic study of Aster section Biotia"
Students may submit their portion of the application (Part A) by emailing to the Committee Chair OR through this Google Form.
Letters of reference and support from the applicant's sponsors (Part B) must be sent separately and directly to the Graduate Student Research Awards Committee Chair, preferably as a PDF. Letters must be signed and should be on official letterhead.
If you have questions regarding eligibility, budget, and scope, please email the Committee Chair at [email protected]