Chloé Lahondère - US grants
Affiliations: | 2010-2013 | Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, VA, United States |
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The funding information displayed below comes from the NIH Research Portfolio Online Reporting Tools and the NSF Award Database.The grant data on this page is limited to grants awarded in the United States and is thus partial. It can nonetheless be used to understand how funding patterns influence mentorship networks and vice-versa, which has deep implications on how research is done.
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High-probability grants
According to our matching algorithm, Chloé Lahondère is the likely recipient of the following grants.Years | Recipients | Code | Title / Keywords | Matching score |
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2021 — 2024 | Stremler, Mark (co-PI) [⬀] Socha, John Lahondère, Chloé Vinauger Tella, Clement |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
Biomechanical Constraints and Trade-Offs Between Sugar and Blood Feeding in Mosquitoes @ Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Although mosquitoes are well known for blood-feeding, only a small number of species actually feed on blood. In many species, both females and males feed solely on sugar solutions with widely varying sugar concentrations. Such mosquitoes do not participate in pathogen transmission to humans, but have essential roles in the ecosystem as pollinators and as food for other animals. In a small number of mosquito species, females have evolved the ability to feed on the blood of animals including mammals and amphibians, whose blood varies in composition and temperature. This project’s goal is to understand how mosquitoes cope with the physical and biological challenges associated with ingesting different types of fluids, by comparing and contrasting species that are sugar- and/or blood-feeders. By taking a collaborative and multidisciplinary approach, the research will elucidate mechanisms that enable these particular species to feed on blood, a topic of great medical and economic importance, given that mosquitoes can transmit pathogens responsible for diseases such as malaria and dengue to humans during blood feeding. Overall, the results of this project are expected to expand knowledge in the fields of biomechanics and disease vector biology and to provide preliminary understanding of how blood feeding systems evolved in insects. The project will provide research experiences for three graduate students and several undergraduate students recruited from HBCUs or who are participating in exiting summer research programs. The researchers will continue efforts to engage K-12 students in learning about insects and to disseminate results to the public both locally and internationally. |
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2021 — 2024 | Morris, John (co-PI) [⬀] Carey, Cayelan Isaacman-Vanwertz, Gabriel Gohlke, Julia Lahondère, Chloé |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
@ Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University This MRI project supports the acquisition of a GC-Vocus-2R instrument that will enable research scientists to obtain significant detail about the composition of organic compounds in the atmosphere. The instrument is a next-generation tool that will better constrain the fate and impacts of organic carbon emitted to the atmosphere and enable a better understanding of the interactions of organic carbon with ecosystems, organisms, and human activities. The instrument is expected to provide the sensitivity, time resolution, specificity, and detail necessary to probe current outstanding questions in atmospheric and environmental chemistry across interfaces. |
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