Thomas Seeley, Ph. D

Affiliations: 
Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, United States 
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"Thomas Seeley"
Mean distance: 18.08 (cluster 43)
 
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Parents

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Edward Osborne Wilson grad student Harvard (Animal Behavior Tree)
Bert Hölldobler grad student 1974-1978 Harvard
 (Co advised for phd)

Children

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Randi D Rotjan research assistant Cornell (Marine Ecology Tree)
Michael S. Engel grad student (Evolution Tree)
James Nieh grad student Institute for Nonlinear Science, University of California San Diego, USA
Stephen Pratt grad student 1997 Cornell (Physics Tree)
David Thomas Peck grad student 2014-2018 Cornell
David Tarpy post-doc Cornell
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Publications

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Peck DT, Seeley TD. (2019) Mite bombs or robber lures? The roles of drifting and robbing in Varroa destructor transmission from collapsing honey bee colonies to their neighbors. Plos One. 14: e0218392
Peck DT, Smith ML, Seeley TD. (2016) Varroa destructor Mites Can Nimbly Climb from Flowers onto Foraging Honey Bees. Plos One. 11: e0167798
Tarpy DR, Delaney DA, Seeley TD. (2015) Mating frequencies of honey bee queens (Apis mellifera L.) in a population of feral colonies in the Northeastern United States. Plos One. 10: e0118734
Seeley TD, Tarpy DR, Griffin SR, et al. (2015) A survivor population of wild colonies of European honeybees in the northeastern United States: investigating its genetic structure Apidologie. 46: 654-666
Strassmann JE, Page RE, Robinson GE, et al. (2011) Kin selection and eusociality. Nature. 471: E5-6; author reply E
Seeley TD, Tarpy DR. (2007) Queen promiscuity lowers disease within honeybee colonies. Proceedings. Biological Sciences / the Royal Society. 274: 67-72
Tarpy DR, Seeley TD. (2006) Lower disease infections in honeybee (Apis mellifera) colonies headed by polyandrous vs monandrous queens. Die Naturwissenschaften. 93: 195-9
Tarpy DR, Gilley DC, Seeley TD. (2004) Levels of selection in a social insect: A review of conflict and cooperation during honey bee (Apis mellifera) queen replacement Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. 55: 513-523
Britton NF, Franks NR, Pratt SC, et al. (2002) Deciding on a new home: how do honeybees agree? Proceedings. Biological Sciences / the Royal Society. 269: 1383-8
Rotjan RD, Calderone NW, Seeley TD. (2002) How a honey bee colony mustered additional labor for the task of pollen foraging Apidologie. 33: 367-373
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