John R. Cooley

Research Interests

My undergraduate research led to a long-term interest in speciation and secondary contact, especially the problem of whether species interactions or physiological factors limit species distributions. My research approaches include a variety of biogeographic, behavioral, historical, and genetic methods and make use of cicadas, which are relatively common hemipteran insects with a worldwide distribution.

My research includes closely related projects concerning the 13- and 17-year periodical cicadas of eastern North America. Periodical cicadas are divided into species, life cycles, broods (or year-classes), and populations, at least one of which emerges somewhere each year. In 1998, I was the co-discoverer of a cryptic periodical cicada species, Magicicada neotredecim, that exhibits a striking pattern of reproductive character displacement where it is sympatric and synchronic with the species M. tredecim (e.g. Cooley et al. 2001). The incompatible sexual signals of these species reduce opportunities for gene flow and provide a rare example of insect premating isolation mediated by song pitch (Cooley et al. 2006). I am actively pursuing three lines of research aimed at understanding speciation and species boundaries in periodical cicadas:

Examples of student research projects

Undergraduate researchers have participated in all aspects of my projects. Examples include Adrianne Smits’ study of female periodical cicada oviposition preferences while at Yale (Smits et al. 2010). A more complex project was Kathryn Fontaine’s project at UCONN investigating the surprisingly common occurrence of paternal mitochondrial leakage in F1 hybrid periodical cicadas (Fontaine et al. 2007). I am also a graduate of an NSF-funded REU program, and I intend to seek NSF-REU funding for additional undergraduate research projects in the future.

Significance

My research has general relevance for understanding processes of speciation, the maintenance of species differences, and mating system evolution.


© 2011 John R. Cooley