Biography:Britt Koskella

From HandWiki
Short description: US academic evolutionary biologist
Britt Koskella
Alma materIndiana University, Bloomington, USA
Children2
Scientific career
FieldsEvolution; microbiomes
InstitutionsUniversity of Exeter, UK; University of California, Berkeley, USA
Thesis (2008)
Doctoral advisorCurtis Lively

Britt Koskella is an associate professor at the University of California, Berkeley, USA. She studies evolutionary biology, specialising in host-pathogen relationships.

Education

Britt Koskella was an undergraduate at University of Virginia, initially studying psychology. Part-time work as a technician with the research group of Janis Antonovics, where she saw experimental evolution laboratory studies of the movement of a plant pathogen between species, changed the direction of her degree and became the foundation of her research interests. She was awarded the degree of Ph. D. by the Indiana University Bloomington in 2008 for research on the role of parasites in host sexual reproduction and diversity, supervised by Curtis Lively. This involved the New Zealand mud snail and its trematode parasite.[1][2]

Career

Her research makes use of bacteriophage-bacteria-plant systems to investigate host-pathogen co-evolution. It involves both field, molecular and laboratory experiments.[3]

After gaining her doctorate she held a fellowship until 2011 to collaborate with Angus Buckling at University of Oxford, UK and John Thompson at University of California, Santa Cruz in studies of the interactions between plants, bacteria and bacteriophage.[1] She then held further fellowships at the University of Exeter from 2011 until 2015. In 2015 she was appointed to a post as associate professor at the University of California, Berkeley.[1]

In 2021 she was awarded the Fleming Prize Lecture by the Microbiology Society.[4]

Publications

Koskella is the author or co-author of over 70 scientific publications and book chapters. These include:

Personal life

Koskella is married. The couple has two children.[1]

References